Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
K. VEERASWAMI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT25/07/1991
BENCH:
SHETTY, K.J. (J)
BENCH:
SHETTY, K.J. (J)
RAY, B.C. (J)
SHARMA, L.M. (J)
VENKATACHALLIAH, M.N. (J)
VERMA, JAGDISH SARAN (J)
CITATION:
1991 SCR (3) 189 1991 SCC (3) 655
JT 1991 (3) 198 1991 SCALE (2)150
ACT:
Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947: Ss. 2, 5(1)(e),
5(2), 6(1)(c)-Public servant--Possession of pecuniary re-
sources or property disproportionate to known sources of
income----Prosecution after superannuation-Previous sanc-
tion-- Whether necessary.
Judge of High Court/Supreme Court--Whether ’public
servant’, liable to prosecution under the Act--Sanctioning
authority--Who is.
Sanctioning authority--Whether vertically superior in
the hierarchy in which office of the public servant exists.
Cl. (c) of s. 6(1)--Whether independent of and separate
from clauses (a) and (b)--Rule of ejusdem generis--Applica-
bility of.
Independence of Judiciary--Whether affected by applica-
tion of the Prevention of Corruption Act to Judges of High
Court/Supreme Court--Issuance of guidelines by Court.
Indian Penal Code, 1860: Ss. 19, 21--"Judge"--Whether
includes a High Court/Supreme Court Judge--Whether ’public
servant’ under s. 2 of Prevention of Corruption Act.
Constitution of India, 1950: Articles 74, 79, 121, 211,
124, 217, 2 18--Provision for initiation of proceeding for
removal of a Judge-Whether a ground for withholding criminal
prosecution of a Judge for offence under s. 5(1) (e) of the
Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947.
Independence of Judiciary----Effect of application of
Prevention of Corruption Act, ]947 to Judges of superior
Courts.
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973: Ss. 154, 173(2),
173(5)-Offence committed by public servant under s. 5(1)(e)
of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947--Complaint re-
garding--Investigation Requirements--Police report/Charge
sheet--Contents of
190
Evidence Act, 1872: S. 106--Offence committed under s.
5(1)(e) of Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947--Possession of
property disproportionate to known sources--Whether fact
within special knowledge of the public servant--Burden of
proof----On whom.
Words and Phrases.’ "satisfactorily account"--Meaning of.
Statutory Interpretation: Rule of ejusdem generis--Ex-
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plained.
HEADNOTE:
A complaint against the appellant, a former Chief Jus-
tice of a High Court, was made to the CBI on which a case
under s. 5(2) read with s. 5( I )(e) of the Prevention of
Corruption Act, 1947 was registered on 24.2.1976. On
28.2.1976 the F.I.R. was filed in the court of Special
Judge. The appellant proceeded on leave from 9.3.1976 and
retired 8.4.1976 on attaining the age of superannuation.
The investigation culminated in the filing of charge-
sheet/final report under s. 173(2), Cr. P.C. against the
appellant on 15.12.1977 before the Special Judge.
The Charge-sheet stated that the appellant after assum-
ing office of the Chief Justice on 1.5.1969 gradually com-
menced accumulation of assets and was in possession of
pecuniary resources and property, in his name and in the
names of his wife and two sons, disproportionate to his
known sources of income for the period between the date of
his appointment as Chief Justice and the date of registra-
tion of the case, and thereby he committed the offence of
criminal misconduct under s. 5( 1 )(e), punishable under s.
5(2) of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947. The Special
judge issued process for appearance of the appellant. Mean-
while, the appellant moved the High Court under s. 482, Cr.
P.C. to quash the said criminal proceedings.
The matter was heard by a Full Bench of the High Court
which dismissed the application by 2:1 majority; but granted
a certificate under Articles 132(1) and 134(1)(c) of the
Constitution in view of the important question of law in-
volved.
In appeal to this Court it was contended by the appel-
lant that the provisions of the Prevention of Corruption
Act, 1947 do not apply to a judge of a superior Court as for
such prosecution previous sanction of an authority competent
to remove a public servant as provided under s. 6 of the
Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947 is imperative and power
to remove a Judge is not vested in any single individual
authority but is
191
vested in the two Houses of Parliament and the President
under Article 124(4) of the Constitution; that the Parlia-
ment cannot be the sanctioning authority for the purpose of
s. 6 and if the President is regarded as the authority, he
cannot act independently as he exercises his powers by and
with the advice of his Council of Ministers and the Execu-
tive may ’misuse the power by interfering with the judici-
ary; that s. 6 applies only in cases where there is master
and servant relationship between the public servant and the
authority competent to remove him, and where there is verti-
cal hierarchy of public offices and the sanctioning authori-
ty. is vertically superior in the hierarchy in which office
of the public servant against whom sanction is sought ex-
ists; that no prosecution can be launched against a Judge of
a superior Court under the provisions of the Prevention of
Corruption Act except in the mode envisaged by Article
124(4) of the Constitution; that no law prohibits a public-
servant having in his possession assets disproportionate to
his known sources of income and such possession becomes an
offence only when the public servant is unable to account
for it; and that the public servant is entitled to an oppor-
tunity by the investigating officer to explain dispropor-
tionality between the assets and the known sources of income
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and the charge sheet must contain such an averment, and
failure to mention that requirement would vitiate the
charge-sheet and render it invalid and, no offence under s.
5(1)(e) of the Act could be made out.
On the questions: (1) whether a Judge of a High Court or
of the Supreme Court is a ’public servant’ within the mean-
ing of s. 2 of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947; (2)
whether a Judge of the High Court including the Chief Jus-
tice, or a Judge of the Supreme Court can be prosecuted for
an offence under the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947; and
(3) who is the competent authority to remove a Judge either
of the Supreme Court or of the High Court from his office in
order to enable that authority to grant sanction for prose-
cution of the Judge under the provisions of s. 6 of the
Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947.
Dismissing the appeal, this Court,
HELD: (Per Majority--Ray, Shetty, Sharma and Venkatachaliah,
JJ).
1. A Judge of a High Court or of the Supreme Court is a
’public servant’ within the meaning of s. 2 of the Preven-
tion of Corruption Act, 1947.
2. Prosecution of a Judge of a High Court, including the
Chief
192
Justice, or a Judge of the Supreme Court can be launched
after obtaining sanction of the competent authority as
envisaged by s. 6 of the Prevention of Corruption Act.
Per Verma, J. (dissenting)--
1. (i) A Judge or Chief Justice of a High Court is a
Constitutional functionary, even though he holds a public
office and in that sence he may be included in the wide
definition of a public servant. But a public servant whose
category for the grant of sanction for prosecution is not
envisaged by s. 6 of the Act is outside the purview of the
Act, not intended to be covered by the Act.
1(ii) The Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947, as amended
by the 1964 amendment is inapplicable to Judges of the High
Courts and the Supreme Court.
(Per Majority--Ray, Shetty and Venkatachaliah, JJ.)
3.1 For the purpose of s. 6(1)(c) of the Prevention of
Corruption Act, 1947, the President of India is the authori-
ty competent to give previous sanction for prosecution of a
Judge of a superior Court.
3.2 No criminal case shall be registered under s. 154,
Cr. P.C. against a Judge of the High Court, Chief Justice of
the High Court or a Judge of the Supreme Court unless the
Chief Justice of India is consulted in the matter.
3.3 If the Chief Justice of India himself is the person
against whom the allegations of criminal misconduct are
received, the Government shall consult any other judge or
Judges of the Supreme Court.
3.4 There shall be similar consultation at the stage of
examining the question of granting sanction for prosecution
and it shall be necessary and appropriate that the question
of sanction be guided by and in accordance with the advice
of the Chief Justice of India.
Sharma. J. (contra)
As to who is precisely the authority for granting previ-
ous sanction for prosecution of a Judge is a matter which
did not arise in the instant case and will have to be final-
ly decided when it directly arises. How-
193
ever, the issues of removal under Art. 124(4) of the Consti-
tution and sanction under s. 6 of the Act can be combined
for getting clearance from the Parliament.
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Verma. J. (dissenting)
3. Section 6 of the Act is inapplicable to Judges of
High Courts or of the Supreme Court and such Constitutional
functionaries do not fail within the purview of the Preven-
tion of Corruption Act, 1947.
Per B.C. Ray, J.
1. A Judge of the High Court or of the Supreme Court
comes within the definition of public servant under s. 2 of
the Prevention of corruption Act, 1947. and he is liable to
be prosecuted under the provisions of the Act. [223E-F]
2.1 A Judge will be liable for committing criminal
misconduct within the meaning of s. 5(1)(e) of the Act, if
he has in his possession pecuniary resources or property
disproportionate to his known sources of income for which he
cannot satisfactorily account. [217B]
2.2 A Judge of a superior Court will not be immune from
prosecution for criminal offences committed during the
tenure of his office under the provisions of the Act. [223F]
3.1 In order to launch a prosecution against a Judge of
a superior Court for criminal misconduct failing under s.
5(1)(e) of the Act, previous sanction of the authority
competent to remove a Judge, including Chief Justice of a
High Court, from his office is imperative. [217C-D; 221G]
3.2 The President of India has the power to appoint as
well as to remove a Judge from his office on the ground of
proved misbehaviour or incapacity as provided in Article 124
of the Constitution and, therefore he, being the authority
competent to appoint and to remove a Judge, of course, in
accordance with the procedure envisaged in clauses(4) and
(5) of Article 124. may be deemed to be the authroity to
grant sanction for prosecution of a Judge under the provi-
sions of s. 6(1)(c) in respect of the offences provided in
s. 5(1)(e) of the Act. [225G-H; 226A-B]
3.3 In order to adequately protect a Judge from frivo-
lous prosecution and unnecessary harassment the President
will consult the Chief Justice of India who will consider
all the materials placed before
194
him and tender his advice to the President for giving sanc-
tion to launch prosecution or for filing FIR against the
Judge concerned after being satisfied in the matter. The
President shall act in accordance with the advice given by
the Chief Justice of India. [226B-C]
If the Chief Justice of India is of opinion that it is
not a fit case for grant of sanction for prosecution of the
Judge concerned, the President shall not accord sanction to
prosecute the Judge. This will save the ,fudge concerned
from unnecessary harassment as well as from frivolous prose-
cution against him. [226C]
In the case of the Chief justice of the Supreme Court,
the President shall consult such of the Judges of the Su-
preme Court as he may deem fit and proper and shall act in
accordance with the advice given to him by the Judge or
Judges of the Supreme Court. [226D]
3.4 In the instant case, the appellant had resigned from
his office and ceased to be a public servant on the date of
lodging the F.I.R. against him by the C.B.I. and, therefore,
no sanction under s. 6(1)(c) of the Act was necessary.
[227A; 228C]
R.S. Nayak v. A.R. Antulay, [1984] 2 SCR 495, referred
to.
4.1 A Judge of the Supreme Court as well as a Judge of
the High Court is a constitutional functionary and to main-
tain the independence of the judiciary and to enable the
Judge to effectively discharge his duties as a judge and to
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maintain the rule of law, even in respect of against the
Central Government or the State Government, he is made
totally independent of the control and influence of the
executive by mandatorily embodying in Article 124 or Article
217 of the Constitution that a Judge can only be removed
from his office in the manner provided in clauses (4) and
(5) of Article 124. [222B-D]
4.2 Power to remove by impeachment or address, a person
holding office during good behaviour, is an essential coun-
terpart to the independence secured to the holders of high
office by making their tenure one of good behaviour instead
of at pleasure. [224D-E]
4.3 A Judge of the Supreme Court or of the High Court
can only be removed on the ground of proved misbehaviour or
incapacity by an order of the President passed after follow-
ing the mandatory procedure expressly laid down in Article
124(4) of the Constitution. Without an address by each of
the Houses of the Parliament, the President is not
195
empowered under the Constitution to order removal of a Judge
of the Supreme Court or of the High Court from his office on
the ground of proved misbehaviour or incapacity. Therefore,
the repository of this power is not in the President alone
but it is exercised after an address by each of the Houses
of Parliament in the manner provided in Article 124(4).
[218B-H; 219A]
Union of India v. Sakalchand, AIR 1977 SC 2328 and S.P.
Gupta and Ors. v. President of India and Ors, AIR 1982 SC
149, referred to.
5. There is no master and servant relationship or
employer and employee relationship between a Judge and the
President of India in whom the executive power of the Union
is vested under the provisions of Article 53 of the Consti-
tution. [222E]
6. It is necessary to evolve some method commensurate
with the grant of sanction in cases of serious allegations
of corruption and acquisition or the possession of dispro-
portionate assets which the Judge cannot satisfactory ac-
count for or possession of property disproportionate to the
sources of income of the Judge. Otherwise, it will create a
serious inroad on the dignity, respect and credibility and
integrity of the high office which a superior ,fudge occu-
pies resulting in the erosion of the dignity and respect for
the high office of the Judges in the estimation of the
public. [225E-F]
7.1 The purpose of grant of previous sanction before
prosecuting a public servant including a Judge of the High
Court or of the Supreme Court is to protect the Judge from
unnecessary harassment and frivolous prosecution more par-
ticularly to save the Judge from the biased prosecution
for giving judgment in a case which goes against the
Government or its officers though based on good reasons and
rule of law. [226D-E]
7.2 Frivolous prosecution cannot be launched against a
Judge for giving a judgment against the Central Government
or any of its officers inasmuch as such decision does not
amount to misbehaviour within the meaning of Article 124 of
the Constitution. [226G-H]
Shamsher Singh & Ant. v. State of Punjab, [1975] 1 SCR
814 and G.K. Daphtary v.O.P. Gupta, AIR 1971 SC 1132, re-
ferred to.
Per Shetty, and Venkatachaliah, JJ.
196
1. The expression "public servant" as defined under s. 2 of
the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947 means a public serv-
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ant as defined in s. 21, I.P.C. From the very commencement
of the I.P.C. "Every Judge" finds a place in the categories
of public servant defined under s. 21 and this expression
indicates all Judges and all Judges of all Courts. It is a
general term and general term in the Act should not be
narrowly construed. It must receive comprehensive meaning
unless there is positive indication to the contrary. There
is no such indication to the contrary in the Act. A Judge of
the superior Court cannot therefore excluded from the defi-
nition of ’public servant’. [237C; 240D; 242A-B]
2.1 A public servant cannot be prosecuted for offences
specified in s. 5 of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947,
unless there is prior sanction under s. 6 for prosecution
from the competent authority. [237E]
2.2 There are two requirements for the applicability of
clause (c) of s. 6(1) to a Judge of the higher
judiciary--the Judge must be a public servant, and there
must be an authority competent to remove him from his of-
fice. If these two requirements are complied with, a Judge
cannot escape from the operation of the Act. [240B-C]
2.3 The Judges are liable to be dealt with just the same
way as any other person in respect of criminal offence. It
is only in taking of bribes or with regard to the offence of
corruption the sanction for criminal prosecution is re-
quired. There is no law providing protection for Judges from
criminal prosecution. [252A-B]
It is not objectionable to initiate criminal proceedings
against public servant before exhausting the disciplinary
proceedings, and a fortiori, the prosecution of a Judge for
criminal misconduct before his removal by Parliament for
proved misbehaviour is unobjectionable. [252D-E]
The "proved misbehaviour" which is the basis for removal
of a Judge under clause (4) of Article 124 of the Constitu-
tion may also in certain cases involve an offence of crimi-
nal misconduct under s. 5(1) of the Act. But that is no
ground for withholding criminal prosecution till the Judge
is removed by Parliament. One is the power of Parliament and
the other is the jurisdiction of a criminal court. Both are
mutually exclusive. [251A-C]
3.1 For the purpose of s. 6(1)(c) of the Act, the
President of India the authority competent to give previous
sanction for the prosecution
197
of a Judge of the Supreme Court and the High Court.
3.2 Section 6(1) brings within its fold all the catego-
ries of public servants as defined in s. 21 of the I.P.C.
Clauses (a) and (b) would cover the cases of public servants
who are employed in connection with the affairs of the Union
or State and are not removable from their office save by or
with the sanction of the respective government. Clause (c)
states that in the case of any other person the sanction
would be of the authority competent to remove him from his
office. [238E-F]
The provisions of clauses (a) and (b) of s. 6 [(1)]
cover certain categories of public servants and the ’other’
which means remaining categories are brought within the
scope of clause (c). Clause (c) is independent of and sepa-
rate from the preceding two clauses. The structure of the
section does not permit the applicability of the rule of
ejusdem generis. [240A-B]
3.3 The application of the ejusdem generis rule is only
to general word following words which are less general, or
the general word following particular and specific words of
the same nature. In such a case, the general word or expres-
sion is to be read as comprehending only things of the same
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kind as that designated by the preceding specific words or
expressions. The general word is presumed to be restricted
to the same genus as those of the particular and specific
words. [239F-G]
3.4 The construction which would promote the general
legislative purpose underlying the provision, is to be
preferred to a construction which would not. [247A]
If the literal meaning of the legislative language used
would lead to results which would defeat the purpose of the
Act, the Court would be justified in disregarding the liter-
al meaning and adopt a liberal construction which effectu-
ates the object of the legislature. [247A-B]
S.A. Venkataraman v. The State, [1958] SCR 1040 and M.
Narayanan v. State of Kerala, [1963] 2 Suppl. SCR 724,
referred to.
Craies on Statute Law, (6th Edn. p. 531) referred to.
3.5 In view of the composition of Parliament, the nature
of transacting business or proceeding in each House, the
prohibition by Article 121 on discussion with respect to the
conduct of any Judge of the Supreme Court or of a High
Court, in the discharge of his duties except
198
upon a motion for presenting an address to the President
praying for his removal, the Parliament cannot be the proper
authority for granting sanction for the prosecution of a
Judge, That does not, however, follow that the Judges of
superior Courts are entitled to be excluded from the scope
of the Act. [245C-F]
3.6 Section 6 requires to be liberally construed. It is
not a penal provision but a measure of protection to public
servants in the penal enactment. It indicates the authori-
ties without whose sanction a public servant cannot be
prosecuted. It is sufficient that the authorities prescribed
thereunder fail within the fair sense of the language of the
section. [247B-C]
The expression "the authority competent to remove" used
in s. 6(1)(c) is to be construed to mean also an authority
without whose order or affirmation the public servant cannot
be removed. The order of the President for removal of a
Judge is mandatory. The motion passed by each House of
Parliament with the special procedure prescribed under Art.
124(4) will not proprio vigore operate against the Judge. It
will not have the consequence of removing the Judge from the
office unless it is followed by an order of the President.
Clause (4) of Art. 124 is in the negative terms. The order
of the President is sine qua non for removal of a Judge. The
President alone could make that order. [247C-E, 248C]
3.7 The relationship of master and servant as is ordi-
narily understood in common law does not exist between the
Judges of higher judiciary and the Government. The Judges
are not bound nor do they undertake to obey any order of the
Government within the scope of their duties. Indeed, they
are not Judges if they allow themselves to be guided by the
Government in the performance of their duties. [239B-D]
Union of India v. H.S. Seth, [1978] 1 SCR 423, referred to.
3.8 It is not necessary that the authority competent to
give sanction for prosecution or the authority competent to
remove the public servant should be vertically superior in
the hierarchy in which the office of the public servant
exists. There is no such requirement under s. 6 of the Act.
The power to give sanction for prosecution can be conferred
on any authority. Such authority may be of the department in
which the public servant is working or an outside authority.
All that is required is that the authority must be in a
position to appreciate the materials collected against the
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public servant to judge whether the prosecution contemplated
is frivolous or speculative. [249B-C]
199
R.S. Nayak v. A.R. Antulay, [1984] 2 SCC 183, distinguished.
The President is not an outsider so far judiciary is
concerned. He appoints the Judges of the High Court and the
Supreme Court in exercise of his executive powers. [249E]
Shamsher Singh v. State of Punjab, [1975] 1 SCR 365 and
S.P. Gupta v. Union of India, [1982] 2 SCR 365, referred to.
Parliament has no part to play in the matter of appoint-
ment of Judges except that the Executive is responsible to
the Parliament. [249G-H]
3.9 In the instant case, the view taken by the High
Court that no sanction for prosecution of the appellant
under s. 6 of the Act was necessary since he had retired
from the service on the age of superannuation and was not a
public servant on the date of filing the charge-sheet, is
unassailable. The question is no longer res integra. [254G-
H; 255C]
S.A. Venkataraman v. The State, [1958] SCR 1040; C.R.
Bansi v. State of Maharashtra, [1971] 3 SCR 236 and K.S.
Dharmadatan v. Central Government & Ors., [1979] 3 SCR 832,
referred to.
R.S. Nayak & Ors v.A.R. Antulay, [1984] 2 SCR 183, referred
to.
4.1 There are various protections afforded to Judges to
preserve the independence of the judiciary. They have pro-
tection from civil liability for any act done or ordered to
be done by them in discharge of their judicial duty whether
or not such judicial duty is performed within the limits of
their jurisdiction, as provided under s. 1 of Judicial
Officers Protection Act, 1850. Likewise s. 77, I.P.C. gives
them protection from criminal liability for an act performed
judicially. A discussion on the conduct of the Judges of the
Supreme Court and the High Courts in the discharge of their
duties shall not take place in Parliament or in the State
Legislatures, as envisaged by Articles 121 and 211 of the
Constitution. The Supreme Court and the High Courts have
been constituted as Courts of Record with the power to
punish for committing contempt as laid down by Articles 129
and 215. The Contempt of Courts Act, 1971 provides power to
take civil and criminal contempt proceedings. The Executive
is competent to appoint the Judges but not empowered to
remove them. The power to remove is vested in Parliament by
the process analogous to impeachment as envisaged by Article
124 of the Constitution. [251E-H; 242E]
200
4.2 Previous sanction of the competent authority as contem-
plated by s. 6 is only to protect the honest public servants
from frivolous and vexatious prosecution. The competent
authority may refuse sanction for prosecution if the offence
alleged has no material to support or it is frivolous or
intended to harass the honest officer. But he is duty bound
to grant sanction if the material collected lend credence to
the offence complained of the discretion to prosecute a
public servant is taken away from the prosecuting agency and
is vested in the authority competent to remove the public
servant. The latter would be in a better position than the
prosecuting agency to assess the material collected in a
dispassionate and reasonable manner and determine whether or
not the sanction for prosecution deserves to be granted.
[237F-G; 238A-C]
4.3 The apprehension, that the Executive being the largest
litigant is likely to misuse the power to prosecute the
Judges, in our overlitigious society is pot unjustified or
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unfounded. The Act provides certain safeguards like s. 6 and
trial by the court which is independent of the Executive.
But these safeguards may not be adequate. Any complaint
against a Judge and its investigation by the CBI, if given
publicity, will have a far reaching impact on the Judge and
the litigant public. The need therefore is a judicious use
of taking action under the Act. Care should be taken that
honest and fearless Judges are not harassed. They should be
protected. [252G-H; 253A-C]
5.1 There is no need for a separate legislation for the
Judges. The Act is not basically defective in its applica-
tion to judiciary. All that is required is to lay down
certain guidelines lest the Act may be misused. This Court
being the ultimate guardian of rights of people and inde-
pendence of the judiciary will not deny itself the opportu-
nity to lay down such guidelines. This Court is not a Court
of limited jurisdiction of only dispute settling. Almost
from the beginning, this Court has been a law maker, albiet,
’interstitial’ law maker. Indeed the Court’s role today is
much more. It is expanding beyond dispute settling and
interstitial law making. It is a problem solver in the
nebulous areas. [253E-G]
5.2 The Chief Justice of India is a participatory func-
tionary in the matter of appointment of Judges of the Su-
preme Court and the High Courts; he is to be consulted by
the President of India even for transfer of a Judge from one
High Court to another; and question of age of a Judge of a
High Court shall be decided by the President after consult-
ing him. The Chief Justice of India being the head of the
Judiciary is primarily concerned with the integrity and
impartiality of the judiciary. Hence it is necessary that
the Chief Justice of India is not
203
either from the evidence of the prosecution and/or evidence
from the defence. [259F-G]
8.3 Parliament is competent to place the burden on
certain aspects on the accused as well and particularly in
matters "especially within his knowledge". (s. 106 of the
Evidence Act). Adroitly the prosecution cannot, in the very
nature of things, be expected to know the affairs of a
public servant found in possession of resources of property
disproportionate to his known sources of income. It is for
him to explain. Such a statute placing burden on the accused
cannot be regarded as unreasonable, unjust, or unfair. Nor
can it be regarded as contrary to Article 21 of the Consti-
tution. The principle that the burden of proof is always on
the prosecution and never shifts to the accused is not a
universal rule to be followed in every case. The principle
is applied only in the absence of statutory provision to the
contrary. [260A-C]
Woolmington v. Director of Public Prosecution, [1935]
A .C. 462; C.S.D. Swamy v. The State, [1960] 1 SCR 461;
Surajpal Singh v. The State of U.P., [1961] 2 SCR 971;
Sajjan Singh v. The State of Punjab, [1964] 4 SCR 630; Rig
v. Hunt, [1986] 3 WLR 1115 and Maharashtra v. K.K.S. Ramas-
wamy, [1978] 1 SCR 274, referred to.
State of Maharashtra v. Wasudeo Ramchandra Kaidalwar,
[1981] 3 SCR 675, referred to.
9.1 To state that after collection of all material, the
investigating officer must give an opportunity to the ac-
cused and call upon him to account for the excess of the
assets over the known sources of income and then decide
whether the accounting is satisfactory or not, would be
elevating him to the position of an enquiry officer or a
judge. He is not holding an enquiry against the conduct of
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the public servant or determining the disputed issues re-
garding the disproportionality between the assets and the
income of the accused. He just collects material from all
sides and prepares a report which he files in the Court as a
chargesheet. The investigating officer is only required to
collect material to find out whether the offence alleged
appears to have been committed. In the course of the inves-
tigation, he may examine the accused. Indeed, fair investi-
gation requires that the accused should not be kept in
darkness. He should be taken into confidence if he is will-
ing to cooperate. [261B-E]
10.1 The charge-sheet is nothing but a final report of
the police officer under s. 173(2) of the Cr. P.C. Section
173(2) provides that on
204
completion of the investigation the police officer investi-
gating into a cognizable Offence shall submit a report,
which must be in the form prescribed by the State Govern-
ment. The statutory requirement of the report under s.
173(2) would be complied with if the various details pre-
scribed therein are included in the report and it accompa-
nies all the documents and statements of witnesses as re-
quired by s. 172(5) Cr. P.C. Nothing more need be stated in
the report of the investigating officer. It is also not
necessary that all the details of the offence must be stat-
ed. The details of the offence are required to be proved to
bring home the guilt of the accused at a later stage in the
course of the trial of the case by adducing acceptable
evidence. [261E-H; 262A-C]
Satya Narain Musadi and Ors. v. State of Bihar, [1980] 3
SCC 152, referred to.
10.2 In the instant case, the charge sheet contained all
the requirements of s. 173(2), Cr.P.C. It stated that the
investigation showed that between 1.5.1969 and 24.2.1976 the
appellant had been in possession of the pecuniary resources
and property in his own name and in the names of his wife
and two sons, which were disproportionate to the known
sources of income over the same period and he cannot satis-
factorily account for such disproportionate pecuniary re-
sources and property. The details of properties and pecuni-
ary resources of the appellant also were set out in clear
terms. No more was required to be stated in the charge
sheet. It was fully in accordance with the terms of s.
173(2), Cr.P.C. and clause (e) ors. 5(1)(e) of the Act.
[262C-E]
11. The society’s demand for honesty in a Judge is
exacting and absolute. The standards of judicial behaviour,
both on and off the Bench, are normally extremely high. For
a judge to deviate from such standards of honesty and impar-
tiality is to betray the trust reposed on him. No excuse or
no legal relativity can condone such betrayal. From the
standpoint of justice the size of the bribe or scope of
corruption cannot be the scale for measuring a judge’s
dishonour. A single dishonest judge not only dishonours
himself and disgraces his office but jeopardises the integ-
rity of the entire judicial system. [262F-H; 263A]
A judicial scandal has always been regarded as far more
deplorable than a scandal involving either the Executive or
a member of the Legislature. The slightest hint of irregu-
larity or impropriety in the Court is a cause for great
anxiety and alarm. [263A-B]
Per Sharma, J.:
1. The expression "public servant" used in the Prevention of
205
Corruption Act, 1947 is undoubtedly wide enough to denote
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every Judge, including the Judges of the High Courts and the
Supreme Court [263D]
2.1 Section 2 of the Act adopts the definition of
"public servant" as given in s. 21, I.P.C. which includes
"Every Judge". If the legislature had intended to exclude
Judges of the High Courts and the Supreme Court from the
field of s. 5 of the Act, it could have said so in unambigu-
ous terms instead of adopting the wide meaning of the ex-
pression "public servant" as given in the Indian Penal Code.
[266E-F]
2.2 No person is above the law. In a proceeding under
Article 124 of the Constitution, a Judge can merely be
removed from his office. He cannot be convicted and pun-
ished. In a case where there is a positive finding recorded
in such a proceeding against the Judge and on that ground he
is removed from his office, it cannot be said that he will
escape the criminal liability. In a civilised society the
law cannot be assumed to be leading to such disturbing
results. [265G; 266A-B]
2.3 It is not safe to assume that the Prevention of
Corruption Act intended to make in its application any
discrimination between the lower and the higher judiciary.
There cannot be any rational ground on the basis of which a
member of a higher judiciary may be allowed to escape prose-
cution while in identical circumstances a member of the
subordinate judiciary is tried and convicted. Such an inter-
pretation of the Act will militate against its constitution-
al validity and should not, therefore, be preferred. [265C-
E]
3.1 The power to remove a High Court Judge from his
office does exist and has to be exercised in appropriate
circumstances according to the provisions of Article |24 of
the Constitution. It cannot, therefore be said that previous
sanction for his prosecution cannot be made available.
[266D-E]
3.2 Section 6(1)(c) of the Act speaks of the "authority
competent to remove" the public servant "from his office".
An answer in the negative to the question as to whether
there is some authority competent to remove a Judge of a
High Court will be inconsistent with Article 124 clauses (4)
and (5) read with Article 218 of the Constitution. Although
more than one person are involved in the process, it is not
permissible to say that no authority exists for the purpose
of exercising the power to remove a High Court Judge from
his office. [264A-C]
As to who is precisely the authority in this regard is a
matter
206
which does not arise in the instant case, but the vital
question whether such an authority exists at all must be
answered in the affirmative. [264C-D]
4.1 If the President is held to be the appropriate
authority to grant the sanction without reference to the
Parliament, he will be bound by the advice he receives from
the Council of Ministers. This will seriously jeopardise the
independence of judiciary which is undoubtedly a basic
feature of the Constitution. [267D-E]
4.2 Since the Constitution itself has considered it
adequate in the matter of dealing with serious accusations
against the Judges by incorporating the provisions of
clauses (4) and (5) in Article 124, they must be treated to
be appropriate and suitable; and should be resorted to in
the matter of prosecution also, in view of the Parliament
enacting s. 6 of the Act in the language which attracts the
constitutional ,provisions. [268B-C]
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4.3 It is true that the grant of sanction will be de-
layed until the accusation is examined according to the law
enacted under Clause (5) of Article 124, but once that stage
is over and a finding is recorded against the Judge, there
should not be any hitch in combining the two matters-the
removal and the grant of sanction-which are obviously inter-
twined, for getting clearance from Parliament. [268E-H;
269A]
5.1 Protection to the public servant in general is
provided under Article 311 of the Constitution and the
interest of the subordinate judiciary is further taken care
of by the High Courts, and this alongwith the provisions
regarding previous sanction shields them from unjustified
prosecution. Similarly, protection is available to the High
Court and Supreme Court Judges through the provisions of
clauses (4) and (5) of Article 124 of the Constitution. So
far this aspect is concerned, the two categories of
Judges--High Court and Supreme Court Judges on the one hand
and the rest on the other--have not been treated by the law
differently. [265C-E]
5.2 The protection to the independence of the Judiciary
is in section 6 of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947,
which by providing for previous sanction of the authority
empowered to remove the Judge, leads to Article 124 of the
Constitution. [268A-B]
6.1 Taking into consideration the independence of Judi-
ciary as envisaged by the Constitution, if the President of
India is treated as the sanctioning authority in the case of
a Judge, and the Chief Justice of
207
India is consulted in the matter and steps-are taken in
accordance with his advice, and the executive follows this
rule strictly, a further protection from harassment of the
Judges is uncalled for and unjustified criminal prosecution
shall be not made available. But such a binding direction
cannot be issued by this Court on the basis of the provi-
sions of the Constitution and the Act. The approval of the
Chief Justice of India can be introduced as a condition for
prosecution only by the Parliament and not by this Court. If
the Court starts supplementing the law as it stands now, it
will be encroaching upon the legislative field. [266G-H;
267A-B; F-H; 268A]
7. Section 5(1)(e) does not contemplate a notice to be
served on the accused. If the prosecuting authority after
making a suitable enquiry, by taking into account the rele-
vant documents and questioning relevant persons, forms the
opinion that the accused cannot satisfactorily account for
the accumulation of disproportionate wealth in his posses-
sion the section is attracted. [269B-D]
8. In the instant case, the records clearly indicate
that after duly taking all the appropriate steps it was
stated that the assets found in the possession of the appel-
lant in his own name and in the names of his wife and two
sons, were disproportionate to his known sources of income
during the relevant period and for which he "cannot satis-
factorily account". [269D-E]
Per Verma, J. (dissenting)-
1.1 A Judge or Chief justice of a High Court is a Con-
stitutional functionary, even though he holds a public
office and in that sense he may be included in the wide
definition of a ’public servant’. However, the holder of an
office who may be a public servant according to the wide
definition of the expression in the prevention of corruption
Act, but whose category for grant of sanction for prosecu-
tion is not envisaged by s. 6 is outside the purview of the
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Act, not intended to be covered by the Act. [289F; 286D-E]
1.2 Section 6(1)(c) of the Prevention of Corruption Act,
1947, is inapplicable to a Judge of a High Court or the
Supreme Court and such constitutional functionaries do not
fall within the purview of the Act. [296B]
1.3 Previous sanction under s. 6 of the Prevention of
Corruption Act, 1947, is a condition precedent for taking
cognizance of an offence punishable under the Act, of a
public servant who is prosecuted during
208
his continuance in the office. The public servant failing
within the purview of the Act must invariably fail within
one of the three clauses in s. 6(1). If the holder of an
office, even though a public servant according to the defi-
nition in the Act does not fail within any of the clauses
(a), (b) or (c) of sub-section (1), he must be deemed to be
outside the purview of the Act since this special enactment
was not enacted to cover that category of public servants in
spite of the wide definition of ’public servant’ in the Act.
[286A-B]
1.4 Section 6(1)(c) speaks of ’authority competent to
remove’, which plainly indicates the substantive competence
of the authority to remove, not merely the procedural or
formal part of it. The authority itself should be competent
to remove or the one to decide the question of removal and
not one which merely obeys or implements the decision of
some other authority. It contemplates that the removing
authority should have the competence to take a decision on
the material placed before it for the purpose of deciding
whether the public servant, against whom sanction is sought,
has been prima facie guilty of abuse of his office so that
there is occasion to bring about cessation of interrelation
between the office and abuse by the holder of the office by
his removal therefrom. [291A-C]
R.S. Nayak v.A.R. Antulay, [1984] 2 SCC 183, referred
to.
1.5 The competent sanctioning authority envisaged by s.
6( 1 )(c) is a vertical superior in the hierarchy having
some power of superintendence over the functioning of the
public servant. Where no such relationship exists in the
absence of any vertical hierarchy and the holder of the
public office is a constitutional functionary not subject to
power of superintendence of any superior, s. 6 can have no
application by virtue of the scheme engrafted therein.
[291C-D]
1.6 Construction of s. 6(1)(c) of the Act treating the
President as the competent authority to remove a High Court
Judge would conflict with the provisions enacted in clauses
(4) and (5) of Article 124 read with Article 218 of the
Constitution. Such a construction has to be avoided. [295B-
C]
1.7 The Prevention of Corruption Act is wholly workable
in its existing form for the public servants within its
purview and there is no impediment in its applicability to
the large number of public servants who have been dealt with
thereunder ever since its enactment. [274A]
209
1.8 In view of the special provisions enacted in
clauses (4) and (5) of Article 124 read with Article 218 of
the Constitution, non-application of s. 6(1) of the Preven-
tion of Corruption Act, 1947 to the Constitutional function-
aries such as Judges of the High Courts and the Supreme
Court, would result only in the failure of the attempt to
bring them within the purview of the Act, while the Act
would continue to apply to the public servants in general
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who fail within the scheme of s. 6 of the Act 1or the pur-
pose of grant of previous sanction for prosecution which is
a condition precedent for cognizance of an offence punisha-
ble under that Act. [295A-E]
2.1 The construction made of the provisions of the Act
must also fit in within the scheme of clauses (4) and (5) of
Article 124 read with Article 218 of the Constitution in
order to present a harmonious scheme. [294C-B]
2.2 There can be no doubt that the expression ’misbeha-
viour’ is of wide import and includes within its ambit
criminal miscondust as defined in sub-section (1) of s. 5 of
the Act as also lesser misconduct of a Judge falling short
of criminal misconduct. The special law envisaged by Article
124(5) for dealing with the misbehaviour of a Judge covers
the field of ’investigation’ and ’proof’ of the ’misbeha-
viour and the only punishment provided is by Article 124(4)
of removal from office. [294D-E]
2.3 Article 124(5) of the Constitution is wide enough to
include within its ambit every conduct of a Judge amounting
to misbehaviour including criminal misconduct and prescribes
the procedure for investigation and proof thereof. [294E]
2.4 Even for the procedure for investigation into any
misbehaviour of a Judge as well as its proof, a law enacted
by the Parliament under Article 124(5) is envisaged in the
constitutional scheme. Such a law in the form of the Judges
(Inquiry) Act, 1968 and the Rules framed thereunder has been
enacted. These provisions were made in the Constitution and
the law thereunder enacted when the Prevention of Corruption
Act, 1947 was in the statute book. [294F-G]
2.5 The prior enactment and existence of the Prevention
of Corruption Act, 1947 at the time when clauses (4) and (5)
of Article 124 of the Constitution were framed, does indi-
cate the constitutional scheme that a separate parliamentary
law to deal with the investigation and proof of misbehaviour
of a Judge was clearly contemplated by providing a special
machinery for this category of constitutional func-
210
tionaries notwithstanding the general law available and
applicable to the public servants in general, which included
the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947. [294G-H; 295A]
2.6 In view of the special provisions in the form of
clauses (4) and (5) of Article 124 and Article 218 of the
Constitution, and the special enactment by the Parliament
under Article 124 (5) provided in the Constitutional scheme
for Judges of the High Courts and the Supreme Court, it
cannot be said that they are governed by the general provi-
sions in addition to these special provisions enacted only
for them. The need for these special provisions is a clear
pointer in the direction of inapplicability to them of the
general provisions applicable to the public servants holding
other public offices, not as constitutional functionaries.
[295A-B]
2.7 The view that Judges of the High Courts and the
Supreme Court are outside the purview of the Prevention of
Corruption Act, fits in with the constitutional scheme and
is also in harmony with the several nuances of the entire
existing law relating to the superior Judges while the
contrary view fouls with it at several junctures and leaves
many gaping holes which cannot be filled by judicial exer-
cise. [303F-G]
2.8 The Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947, as amended
by the 1964 amendment, is inapplicable to Judges of the High
Courts and the Supreme Court. [304A]
46 Am. Jur. 2d. $ 84, referred to.
3.1 There is practical difficulty in applying criminal
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misconduct, defined in clause (e) of sub-section (1) of s. 5
of the Act to a Judge of a High Court or the Supreme Court.
[296C]
3.2 The words in clause (e) of s. 5 (1) of the Act have
to be given some meaning which would place the burden on the
prosecution, howsoever light, to make out a prima facie case
for obtaining sanction of the competent authority under s. 6
of the Act and this can be done only if it is read as a part
of the scheme under which the public servant is required to
furnish particulars of his assets with reference to which
the disproportion and his inability to satisfactorily ac-
count can be inferred. [297A-B]
3.3 While according sanction to prosecute under s. 6 of
the Act, the competent authority has to satisfy itself about
the public servant’s inability to satisfactorily account for
possession of disproportionate assets. The competent author-
ity before granting sanction has to apply
211
its mind and be satisfied about the existence of a prima
facie case for prosecution of the public servant on the
basis of the material placed before it. In order to form an
objective opinion, the competent authority must have before
it the version of the public servant on the basis of which
the conclusion can be reached whether it amounts to satis-
factory account or not. [296E-F]
3.4 The rules applicable to the public servants in
general regulating their conduct require them to furnish
periodical information of their assets which form a part of
their service record. In the case of such public servants
whenever sanction to prosecute is sought under s. 6, the
competent authority can form the requisite opinion on the
basis of the available material including the service record
of the public servant to code to the conclusion whether the
offence under clause (e) of s. 5 (1) of possession of dis-
proportionate assets which the public servant cannot satis-
factorily account is made outprima facie. [296F-G, 297C-D]
3.5 In the case of Judges of the High Courts and the
Supreme Court, there is no requirement under any provision
of furnishing particulars of their assets so as to provide a
record thereof with reference to which such an opinion can
be formed and there is no vertical superior with legal
authority enabling obtaining of information from the con-
cerned Judge. This too is a pointer in the direction that
even after the 1964 amendment of the Act the Legislature did
not intend to include Judges of the High Courts and the
Supreme Court within the purview of the enactment. [297D-F]
4.1 If the Act is applicable to Judges of the High
Courts and the Supreme Court, it is obvious that the same
must apply also to the Chief Justice of India, the Comptrol-
ler and Auditor General and the Chief Election Commissioner.
Incongruous results would follow in such an event. [297F-G]
4.2 If the involvement of the Chief Justice of India is
necessary even for commencing the investigation into the
offence, and the President while granting the sanction under
s. 6(1)(c) is also assumed to act on the advice of the Chief
Justice of India and if it is permissible to do so in the
absence of any ’such provision in the Act, the problem would
arise where such action is contemplated against the Chief
Justice of India himself. [297G-H; 298A]
4.3 Any provision which cannot apply to the Chief Justice of
212
India, cannot apply to the Judges of the Supreme Court, or
for that matter even to the High Court Judges, since the
Chief Justice of India is not a vertical superior of any of
them, there being no such vertical hierarchy and the Chief
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Justice of India having no power of superintendence even
over the High Court Judges, much less the Supreme Court
Judges. [298A-B]
4.4 In the case of the Comptroller and Auditor General
and the Chief Election Commissioner, the situation would be
more piquant. The Chief Justice of India cannot be involved
in the process relating to them and there is none else to
fill that role in that situation. The Constitution, while
providing that their position would be akin to that of a
Judge of the Supreme Court, could not have intended to place
them on a pedestal higher than that of a Supreme Court
Judge. If the Act was intended to apply to these constitu-
tional functionaries, it could not have been enacted leaving
such gaping holes which are incapable of being plugged to
present a comprehensive scheme for this purpose. [298C-E]
5.1 The need for sanction under s. 6 of the Act for
prosecution of the holder of a public office indicates the
ambit and scope of the enactment for deciding whether the
holder of a public office falls within the purview of the
enactment. No sanction for prosecution under s. 6 is re-
quired after the public servant ceases to hold office, but
it does not imply that every holder of a public office after
ceasing to hold that office is within the purview of the
enactment, even though during the tenure in office, only
those public servants are within its ambit in whose case
sanction under s. 6 must be obtained. [298F-H; 299A]
5.2 The ambit of the enactment is to be determined on
the basis of the public office held by the public servant,
which office is alleged to have been abused during the
tenure for committing the offence of criminal misconduct
under the Act and it is not the fact of continuance in that
office or ceasing to hold it which decides the ambit of the
enactment. If the holder of a public office during his
tenure in office cannot be prosecuted without sanction under
s. 6, then, no sanction for his prosecution after ceasing to
hold the office may be necessary, but his prosecution is
made because while in office he could be prosecuted with the
previous sanction under s. 6. Conversely, if the holder of a
public office while continuing in that office could not be
prosecuted under this Act on account of inapplicability of
s. 6 and, therefore, the non-feasibility of previous sanc-
tion for prosecution under s. 6, then on his ceasing to hold
213
5.3 It is for the purpose of construing the provisions
of the enactment and determining the scope and ambit thereof
and for deciding whether the holder of a public office comes
within the purview of the enactment that the feasibility of
previous sanction for prosecution and applicability of s. 6
of the Act is important since it holds the key which unlocks
the true vistas of the enactment. [299D-E]
5.4 The concept of the sanction for prosecution by a
superior is so inextricably woven into the fabric of the
enactment that the pattern is incomplete without it. The
clear legislative intent is that the enactment applies only
to those in whose case sanction of this kind is contemplated
and those to whom the provision of sanction cannot squarely
apply are outside its ambit. The provision for sanction is
like the keystone in the march of the enactment. Remove the
keystone of sanction and the arch crumbles. [299E-G]
R.S. Nayak v. A.R. A ntulay, [1984] 2 SCC 183, dis-
tinguished.
6.1 The higher judiciary was treated differently in the
Constitution indicating the great care and attention be-
stowed in prescribing the machinery for making the appoint-
ments. It was expected that any deviation from the path of
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rectitude at that level would be a rare phenomenon and for
the exceptional situation the provision of removal in ac-
cordance with clause (4) of Article 124 was made, the diffi-
culty in adopting that course being itself indicative of the
rarity with which it was expected to be invoked. It appears
that for a rare aberrant at that level, unless the Judge
resigned when faced with such a situation, removal from
office in accordance with Article 124(4) was envisaged as
the only legal sanction. If this was the expectation of the
framers of the Constitution and their vision of the moral
fibre in the higher echelons of the judiciary in free India,
there is nothing surprising in the omission to bring them
within the purview of the Prevention of Corruption Act,
1947, or absence of a similar legislation for them alone.
This position continued even during the deliberations of the
Santham Committee which clearly mentioned in ics Report
submitted in 1964 that it has considered the judiciary
outside the ambit for its deliberations. Clearly, it was
expected that the higher judiciary Whose word would be final
in the interpretation of all laws including the Constitu-
tion, will be comprised of men leading in the spirit of
self-sacrifice concerned more with their obligations then
rights, so that there would be no occasion for any one else
to sit in judgment over them. [305H; 306A-D]
6.2 The fact that the Parliament did not enact any other law
for
214
the investigation into allegations of corruption against a
superior Judge and for his trial and punishment for that
offence and rest content merely with enacting the Judges
(Inquiry) Act, 1968, to provide for the procedure for remov-
al of a Judge under Article 124 (4) is a clear pointer in
the direction that the Parliament has not as yet considered
it expedient to enact any such law for the trial and punish-
ment on the charge of corruption of a superior Judge, except
by his removal from office in the manner prescribed. The
provisions of the Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968, provide the
procedure for investigation and proof of an allegation of
corruption against a superior Judge and if the Prevention of
Corruption Act, 1947 is held applicable to them, then there
would be two separate procedures under these two enactments
providing for investigation into the same charge. This
anomaly and incongruity cannot be attributed to a conscious
act of the Parliament while enacting Judges (Inquiry)
Act, 1968, after the 1964 amendment in the Prevention of
Corruption Act. [301D-F]
7.1 The constitutional functionaries namely Judges of
High Courts, Judges of the Supreme Court, the Comptroller
and Auditor General and the Chief Election Commissioner were
never intended to fall within the ambit of the Act as ini-
tially enacted in 1947, when provisions similar to Articles
124(4) and (5) of the Constitution were present in the
Government of India Act, 1935, nor was any such attempt made
by amendment of the Prevention of Corruption Act in 1964 and
the same position continues in the Prevention of Corruption
Act, 1988. [300A-B]
7.2 If there is now a felt need to provide for such a
situation, the remedy lies in suitable parliamentary legis-
lation for the purpose preserving the independence of judi-
ciary free from likely executive influence while providing a
proper and adequate machinery for investigation into allega-
tions of corruption against such constitutional function-
aries and for their trial and punishment after the investi-
gation. The remedy is not to extend the existing law and
make it workable by reading into it certain guidelines for
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which there is no basis in it, sing the Act was not intended
to apply to them. [300B-C]
7.3 The test of applicability of the existing law would
be the legal sanction and justiciability of the proposed
guidelines without which it is unworkable in the case of
such persons. In fact, the very need to read the proposed
guidelines in the existing law by implication is a clear
indication that the law as it exists does not apply to them.
Making the law applicable with the aid of the suggested
guidelines, is not in the domain of judicial craftsmanship,
but a naked usurpation of legislative power in a virgin
field. [300C-D]
215
8.1 Laying down guidelines to be implicitly obeyed, if
they find no place in the existing enactment and to bring
the superior Judges within the purview of the existing law
on that basis would amount to enacting a new law outside the
scope of the existing law and not merely construing it by
supplying the deficiencies to make it workable for achieving
the object of its enactment. [273E-F]
S.P. Sampath Kumar v. Union of India, [1987] 1 SCC 124,
distinguished.
8.2 In case a legislation like the Prevention of Corrup-
tion Act for superior Judges also is considered necessary at
this point of time, the Parliament can perform its function
by enacting suitable legislation, it being a virgin field of
legislation. [274B]
8.3 There is no material to indicate that corruption in
judiciary was a mischief to be cured when the Prevention of
Corruption Act was enacted. For this reason, the desirabili-
ty now expressed of having such a law cannot be an aid to
construction of the existing law to widen its ambit and
bring these constitutional functionaries within it. [273B-C]
8.4 Judicial activism can supply the deficiencies and
fill gaps in an already existing structure found deficient
in some ways, but it must stop sort of building a new edi-
fice where there is none. [273D]
8.5 If it is considered that the situation has altered
requiring scrutiny of the conduct of even Judges at the
highest level, and that it is a matter for the Parliament to
decide, then the remedy lies in enacting suitable legisla-
tion for that purpose providing for safeguards to ensure
independence of judiciary since the existing law does not
provide for that situation. [306D-E]
8.6 Any attempt to bring the Judges of the High Courts
and the supreme Court within the purview of the Prevention
of Corruption Act by a seemingly constructional exercise of
the enactment, appears to be an exercise to fit a square peg
in a round hole when the two were never intended to match.
[306E-F]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 400
of 1979.
From the Judgment and Order dated 27.4.79 of the Madras
High Court in Criminal Misc. P. No. 265 of 1978.
216
Kapil Sibal, B.R.L. Iyengar, K.V. Mohan, S.R. Setia,
K.R. Nambiar and A.K. Nigam for the Appellant.
A.D. Giri, Solicitor General, K.T.S. Tulsi, Additional
Solicitor General, A.M. Khanwilkar and P. Parmeswaran for
the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
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RAY, J. I have had the advantage of deciphering the two
draft judgments prepared by my learned brothers Shetty and
Verma, JJ. I agree with the conclusions arrived at by my
learned brother Shetty, J. Yet considering the great impor-
tance of the questions involved in this matter, I deem it
just and proper to consider the same and to express my own
views.
Three very important questions fall for decision in this
case. First of all whether a Judge of the Supreme Court or a
Judge of a High Court is a public servant within the meaning
of Section 2 of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947.
Section 2 of the Prevention of Corruption Act interprets a
public servant as meaning a public servant as defined in
section 21 of the Indian Penal Code i.e. Act 45 of 1860.
Section 21 of the Indian Penal Code states that a public
servant denotes a person falling under any of the descrip-
tion mentioned therein:
"Third--Every Judge including any person
empowered by law to discharge, whether by
himself or as a member of any body of persons
any adjudicarory functions."
Thus, the definition of a public servant is very wide
enough to include Judges of the Supreme Court as well as
Judges of the High Court. Section 77 of the Indian Penal
Code provides immunity to the Judges in respect of any act
done by a Judge when acting judicially in the exercise of
any power which is, or which in good faith he believes to
be, given to him by law.
The next question is whether a judge of the Supreme
Court or a Judge of High Court including the Chief Justice
of the High Court can be prosecuted for having committed the
offence of criminal misconduct as referred to in clause (e)
of sub-section 1 of section 5 of the Prevention of Corrup-
tion Act, 1947. Provisions of clause (e) of section 5(1) are
as follows:-
217
"if he or any person on his behalf is in
possession or has, at any time during the
period of his office, been in possession, for
which the public servant cannot satisfactorily
account, of pecuniary resources or property
disproportionate to his known sources of
income."
Therefore, it is clear that a Judge will be liable for
committing criminal misconduct within the meaning of clause
(e) of sub-section (1) of section 5 of the said Act if he
has in his possession pecuniary resources or property dis-
proportionate to his known sources of income for which the
public servant (or a Judge as the public servant) cannot
satisfactorily account. Section 6(1)(c) specifically enjoins
that no court shall take cognizance of an offence punishable
under Section 5 of this Act, alleged to have been committed
by a public servant i.e. the Judge of the High Court includ-
ing the Chief Justice of the High Court as in the present
case, except with the previous sanction under clause (c) in
the case of any other person, of the authority competent to
remove him from his office. So to initiate a proceeding
against a Judge of a Supreme Court for criminal misconduct
failing under Section 5(1)(e), previous sanction of the
authority who is competent to remove a Judge including Chief
Justice of the High Court from his office, is imperative.
A Judge of the Supreme Court as well as a Judge of the
High Court is a constitutional functionary appointed under
Article 124 and under Article 217 of the Constitution re-
spectively. Sub-article 2 of Article 124 further provides
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that every Judge of the Supreme Court shall be appointed by
the President by warrant under his hand and seal after
consultation with such of the Judges of the Supreme Court
and of the High Courts in the States as the President may
deem necessary for the purpose and shall hold office until
he attains the age of sixty-five years. It also provides
that in the case of appointment of a Judge other than the
Chief Justice, the Chief Justice of India shall always be
consulted. Article 217 provides that every Judge of a High
Court shall be appointed by the President by warrant under
his hand and seal after consultation with the Chief Justice
of India, the Governor of the State, and in the case of
appointment of a Judge other than the Chief justice, the
Chief Justice of the High Court. Sub-article 4 of the said
article 124 further enjoins that a Judge of the Supreme
Court shall not be removed from his office except by an
order of the President passed after an address by each House
of Parliament supported by a majority of the total member-
ship of that House and by a majority of not less than two-
thirds of the members of that House present and voting has
218
been presented to the President in the same session for such
removal on the ground of proved misbehaviour or incapacity.
Sub-article (5) also provides that Parliament may by law
regulate the procedure for the presentation of an address
and for the investigation and proof of the misbehaviour or
incapacity of a Judge under clause (4). Article 2 18 states
that provisions of clauses (4) and (5) of Article 124 shall
apply in relation to a High Court.
On a plain reading of the provisions of sub-article 4 of
Article 124, a Judge of the Supreme Court can only be re-
moved on the ground of proved misbehaviour or incapacity by
an order of the President passed after an address by each
House of Parliament supported by a majority of the total
membership of that House and by a majority of not less than
two-thirds of the members of that House present and voting,
has been presented to the President in the same session for
such removal on the ground of proved misbehaviour or inca-
pacity. In other words, the President cannot on its own
remove a Judge of the Supreme Court unless an address by
each House of Parliament supported by a majority of the
total membership of that House and by a majority of not less
than two-thirds of the members of that House present and
voting, is passed and presented to him for removal of the
Judge on the ground of proved misbehaviour or incapacity.
Therefore, the repository of this power is not in the Presi-
dent alone but it is exercised after an address by each
House of Parliament supported by a majority of the total
membership of that House and by a majority of not less than
two-third of the members of that House is presented to the
President. Without such an address by each of the House of
the Parliament, the President is not empowered under the
Constitution to order removal Of a Judge of the Supreme
Court from his office. Article 2 18 lays down that a Judge
of the High Court may be removed from his office by the
President in the manner provided under clauses (4) and (5)
of Article 124. So viewing the aforesaid constitutional
provisions for removal of a Judge for proved misbehaviour or
incapacity, it is imperative that each House of the Parlia-
ment shall make an address to the President after the same
is supported by a majority of the total membership of that
House and by a majority for not less than two-thirds of the
members of that House present and voting. Unless that ad-
dress is presented to the President in the same session for
such removal, the President is not empowered under the
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Constitution to make the order for removal of the Judge of
the Supreme Court of India or of the Judge of the High Court
on the ground of proved misbehaviour or incapacity. Of
course, the power of the President to remove a Judge of the
Supreme Court or of the High Court is to be
219
exercised by the President in the manner expressly laid down
in clause 4 of Article 124. In the case of Union of India v.
Sankalchand, AIR 1977 (SC) 2328 it has been observed by
majority of the Constitution Bench that there is no need or
justification, in order to uphold or protect the independ-
ence of the judiciary, for construing Article 222(1) to mean
that a Judge cannot be transferred from one High Court to
another without his consent.
"The power to transfer a High Court Judge is
conferred by the Constitution in public inter-
est and not for the purpose of providing the
executive with a weapon to punish a Judge who
does not toe its line or who, for some reason
or the other, has fallen from its grace. The
executive possesses no such power under our
Constitution and if it can be shownthough we
see the difficulties in such showing--that a
transfer of a High Court Judge is made in a
given case for an extraneous reason, the
exercise of the power can appropriately be
struck down as being vitiated by legal mala
fides. The extraordinary power which the
Constitution has conferred on the President by
Art. 222(1) cannot be exercised in a manner
which is calculated to defeat or destroy in
one stroke the object and purpose of the
various provisions conceived with such care
to insulate the judiciary from the influence
and pressures of the executive. The power to
punish a High Court Judge, if one may so
describe it, is to be found only in Art. 2 18
read with Art. 124(4) and (5) of the Constitu-
tion, under which a Judge of the High Court
can be removed from his office by an order of
the President passed after an address by each
House of Parliament, supported by a majority
of the total membership of that House and by a
majority of not less then two-thirds of the
members of that House present and voting, has
been presented to the President in the same
session for such removal on the ground of
proved misbehaviour or incapacity. Thus, if
the power of the President, who has to act on
the advice of the Council of Ministers, to
transfer a High Court Judge for reasons not
bearing on public interest but arising out of
whim, caprice or fancy of the executive or its
desire to bend a Judge to its own way of
thinking, there is no possibility of any
interference with the independence of the
judiciary if a Judge is transferred without
his consent.
The same view about the independence of the judiciary from
the con-
220
trol of the executive has been spelt out by the observations
of the Constitution Bench of Seven Judges in the case of
S.P. Gupta & Ors. v. President of India and Ors., AIR 1982
(SC) 149.
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"The concept of independence of
judiciary is a noble concept which inspires
the Constitutional Scheme and constitute the
foundation on which rests the edifice of our
democratic polity. If there is one principle
which runs through the entire fabric of the
Constitution, it is the principle of the rule
of law and under the Constitution, it is the
judiciary which is entrusted with the task of
keeping every organ of the State within the
limits of the law and thereby making the rule
of law meaningful and effective. It is to aid
the judiciary in this task that the power of
judicial review has been conferred upon the
judiciary and it is by exercising this power
which constitutes one of the most potent
weapons in armoury of the law, that the judi-
ciary seeks to protect the citizen against
violation of his constitutional or legal
rights or misuse of abuse of power by the
State or its officers. The judiciary stands
between the citizen and the State as a bulwark
against executive excesses and misuse or abuse
or power by the executive and there it is
absolutely essential that the judiciary must
be free from executive pressure or influence
and this has been secured by the Constitution
makers by making elaborate provisions in the
Constitution to which detailed reference has
been made in the judgments in Sankalchand
Sheth’s case (AIR 1977 SC 2326) (supra). But
it is necessary to remind ourselves that the
concept of independence of the judiciary is
not limited only to independence from execu-
tive pressure or influence but it is a much
wider concept which takes within its sweep
independence from many other pressures and
prejudices. It has many dimensions. namely
fearlessness of other power centres economic
or political, and freedom from prejudices
acquired and nourished by the class of which
the Judges belong. If we may again quote the
eloquent words of Justice Krishna Iyer:
"Independence of the judiciary is not
genuflexion; nor is it opposition to every
proposition of Government. It is neither
judiciary made to opposition measure nor
Government’s pleasure.
221
The tyceon, the communalist, the
parochialist, the faddist, the extremist and
radical reactionary lying coiled up and sub-
consciously shaping judicial menrations
are menaces to judicial independence when they
are at variance with parts III and IV of the
Paramount Parchment".
Judges should be of stern stuff and
tough fibre, unbending before power, economic
or political, and they must uphold the core
principle of the rule of law which says "Be
you ever so high, the law is above you." This
is the principle of independence of the judi-
ciary which is vital for the establishment of
real participatory democracy, maintenance of
the rule of law as a dynamic concept and
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delivery of social justice to the vulnerable
sections of the community. It is this princi-
ple of independence of the judiciary which we
must keep in mind while interpreting the
relevant provisions of the Constitution.
The third most crucial question that fails for consider-
ation in this case is who is the competent authority to
remove a Judge either of the, Supreme Court or of the High
Court from his office in order to enable that authority to
grant sanction for prosecution of the Judge under the provi-
sions as enjoined by Section 6 of the Prevention of Corrup-
tion Act, 1947. Section 6 has been couched in negative terms
to the following effect:
"No Court shall take cognizance of an offence
punishable under Section 16 1 or Section 164
or Section 165 of the Indian Penal Code (45 of
1860), or under sub-section (2) or sub-section
(3A) of Section 5 of this Act, alleged to have
been committed by a public servant, except
with the previous sanction, ...
(c) in the ease of any other person, of the
authority competent to remove him from his
office.
In order to launch a prosecution against a Judge either
of the Supreme Court or of the High Court or the Chief Jus-
tice of the High Court previous sanction of the authority
competent to remove a Judge from his office is mandatorily
required. The question, therefore, arises who is the author-
ity competent to grant sanction. The Judge of the Supreme
Court or the Judge of the High Court is appointed under the
provisions of Article 124 or under the provisions of Article
217 respec-
222
tively. A Judge of the Supreme Court shall be appointed by
the President by the warrant under his hand and seal after
consultation with such Judges of the Supreme Court and of
the High Court in the State as the President may deem neces-
sary for the purpose and shall hold office until he attains
the age of 65 years. Similarly, a Judge of the High Court
shall be appointed by the President by the warrant under his
hand and seal after consultation with the Chief Justice of
India, the Governor of the State, and in case of an appoint-
ment of the Judge other than the Chief Justice, the Chief
Justice of the High Court and shall hold office except in
the case of an additional judge till he attains the age of
62 years. It is, therefore, evident that a Judge of the
Supreme Court as well as a Judge of the High Court is a
constitutional functionary as has been observed by this
Court in the decisions cited hereinbefore and to maintain
the independence of the judiciary and to enable the Judge to
effectively discharge his duties as a Judge and to maintain
the rule of law, even in respect of lis against the Central
Government or the State Government. The Judge is made total-
ly independent of the control and influence of the executive
by mandatorily embodying in article 124 or article-217 that
a Judge can only be removed from his office in the manner
provided in clause (4) and (5) of article 124. Thus, a Judge
either of the High Court or of the Supreme Court is inde-
pendent of the control of the executive while deciding cases
between the parties including the Central Government and
State Government uninfluenced by the State in any manner
whatsoever. It is beyond any pale of doubt that there is no
master and servant relationship or employer and employee
relationship between a Judge of the High Court and the
President of India in whom the executive power of the Union
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is vested under the provisions of Article 53 of the Consti-
tution. The President has not been given the sole power or
the exclusive power to remove a Judge either of the Supreme
Court or of the High Court from his office though the Presi-
dent appoints the Judge by warrant under his hand and seal
after consultation with such of the Judges of the Supreme
Court and of the High Court in the States as he may deem
necessary for that purpose and in case of the appointment of
the Judge of the High Court, the President appoints a Judge
by warrant under his hand and seal after consultation with
the Chief Justice of India, the Governor of the State and in
a case of appointment of a Judge other than the Chief Jus-
tice, the Chief Justice of the High Court. The only mode of
removal of a Judge from his office on the ground of proved
misbehaviour or incapacity is laid down in clauses (4) and
(5) of Article 124. It is has been eloquently and vehemently
urged on behalf of the appellant that since the Judge of the
Supreme Court as well as of the High Court is a constitu-
tional functionary and
223
there is no employer and employee relationship or master and
servant relationship between the Judge and the President of
India and for that the Central Government or the State
Government there is no authority to remove the Judge from
’his office by the executive except by taking recourse to
procedure of impeachment as envisaged in Article 124(4) and
(5) of the Constitution of India. It has been further urged
in this connection that if it is assumed that the President
has the power to remove a Judge of the Supreme Court or of
the High Court from his office it will do away with the
independence of the judiciary and will being the judiciary
under the control of the executive indirectly in as much as
under Article 74 of the Constitution of India, the President
while exercising his executive power has to act on the aid
and advice of the Council of Ministers with the Prime Minis-
ter at the Head, as has been held by this Court in Shamsher
Singh & Anr. v. State of Punjab, [1975] 1 SCR 814 and S.P.
Gupta & Ors. etc. etc. v. Union of Inida & Ors. etc. etc.,
(supra). It has been, therefore, urged that Section 6(i)(C)
of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947 is not applicable
to the case of a Judge of the Supreme Court or of the High
Court No prosecution can be launched against a Judge of the
Supreme Court or of the High Court under the provisions of
the said Act except in the mode envisaged in Article 124,
clauses 4 and 5 of the Constitution for removal of the
Judge. The FIR in question, which has been lodged against
the appellant should be quashed and set-aside Section 2 of
the Prevention of Corruption Act denotes a public servant as
defined in Section 21 of the Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860).
It has been noticed hereinbefore that the third clause
particularly of Section 21 of the Indian Penal Code includes
every Judge including any person empowered by law to dis-
charge whether by himself or as a member of any body of
persons any adjudicatory functions. Therefore a Judge of the
High Court or of the Supreme Court comes within the defini-
tion of public servant and he is liable to be prosecuted
under the provisions of ’the Prevention of Corruption Act.
It is farthest from our mind that a Judge of the Supreme
Court or that of the High Court will be immune from prosecu-
tion for criminal offences committed during the tenure of
his office under the provisions of the Prevention of Corrup-
tion Act.
In these circumstances the only question to be consid-
ered is who will be the authority or who is the authority to
grant sanction for prosecution of a Judge of the High Court
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under section 6(1)(c) of the said Act. The Judge as a con-
stitutional functionary being appointed by the President can
only be removed by mandatory procedure provided under Arti-
cle 124 of the Constitution and in no other manner. The
Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968 has been enacted by Parliament to
regulate
224
the procedure for the investigation and proof of the misbe-
haviour or incapacity of a Judge of the Supreme Court under
clause (5) of subsection 1 of Article 124 of the Constitu-
tion. The Judges (Inquiry) Rules, 1969 have been framed
under section 7(4) of the Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968. The
said Act and the Rules made thereunder only provide for
removal of a Judge on the ground of proved misbehaviour or
inability. It does not provide for prosecution of a Judge
for offences under section 5(1)(e) of the Prevention of
Corruption Act. It is apropos to mention in this connection
that in England, before the full development of ministerial
responsibility, impeachment was a weapon enabling the Com-
mons to call to account ministers appointed by, and respon-
sible to, the Crown. As the commons acquired direct control
over ministers, there was no need to employ the cumbersome
machinery of impeachment and there has been no impeachment
since 1805. As impeachment of political offenders might
involve not only deprivation of office but other penalties,
the royal prerogative of pardon does not extend to prevent-
ing impeachment but extends to pardoning punishments in-
flicted on an impeachment. In England, offices held during
good behaviour may in the event of misconduct be determined
by impeachment. In practice, however, an address to the
Crown for the removal of a judge must originate in the House
of Commons; the procedure is judicial and the judge is
entitled to be heard. There is no instance of the removal of
a judge by this method since the Act of Settlement. This
power to remove by impeachment or address, a person holding
office during good behaviour, is an essential counterpart to
the independence secured to the holders of high office by
making their tenure one of good behaviour instead of at
pleasure.
Under Art. II, s. 4, U.S. Constitution, the President,
VicePresident and ’all civil officers of the United States
can be removed from office on impeachment for, and convic-
tion of, "Treason, Bribery or other high Crimes and misde-
meanours". Since the President of the United States who is
the, highest executive authority of the State, an impeach-
ment has been provided for and in fact, President Johnson
was impeached in 1867 for high crimes and misdemeanours. In
1917, Justice Archibald of the Commerce Court was’removed
from office by impeachment for soliciting for himself and
others, favours from railroad companies, some of which were
at the time litigants in his court; in 1936 the removal of
Judge Wright of the Florida Court for conduct in relation to
a receivership Which evoked serious doubts as to this integ-
rity, although he was acquitted of specific charges, seem to
have restored the wider view. For, in neither case, were the
two judges found guilty of an indictable offence. It has
been said that:
225
"As to the Judges of the United States at
least lack of ’good behaviour’ and ’high
crimes and misdemeanours’ are overlapping if
not precisely coincidental concepts."
(Seervai’s Constitutional Law of India, Third Edition,
Vol.II, page 1698 paras 18.8 and 18.9).
It has been urged by the Solicitor General as well as
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the Additional Solicitor General that the Judges of the High
Court cannot be said to be exempted from prosecution in
respect of offences provided in the Prevention of Corruption
Act. It has been urged further that under Article 361, the
President and the Governor have been given protection from
being answerable to any court for the exercise and perform-
ance of the powers and duties of his office or for any act
done or purporting to be done by him in the exercise and
performance of those powers and duties. Clause 2 of the said
Article further provides that no criminal proceedings what-
soever shall be instituted or Continued against the Presi-
dent, or the Governor of a State, in any court during his
term of office. No such immunity from criminal prosecution
has been provided for in the case of a Judge of the High
Court or of the Supreme Court. It has, therefore, been urged
that the High Court should ensure modalities for launching
prosecution against a Judge under the said Act. Undoubtedly,
respect for the judiciary and its public credibility and
dignity has to be maintained in order to ensure respect for
the Judges in public and also for the decisions rendered by
the judges. It is, therefore, necessary to evolve some
method commensurate with the grant of sanction in cases of
serious allegation corruption and acquisition or the posses-
sion of disproportionate assets which the Judge cannot
satisfactorily account for’or possession of property dispro-
portionate to the sources of income of the Judge. If these
things are allowed to go unnoticed it will create a serious
inroad on the dignity respect, and credibility and integrity
of the High Office which a Judge of the Supreme Court and of
the High Court occupies resulting in the erotion on the
dignity and respect for the high office of the Judges in the
estimation of the public. As has been suggested by my
learned Brother Shetty, J. that the President is given the
power to appoint the Judges of the Supreme Court as well as
of the High Court by warrant under his hand and seal and
similarly even after passing of an address by both the
Houses of the Parliament in the manner provided in Article
124, clauses (4) and (5) and placed before the President, a
Judge cannot be removed from his office unless and order to
that effect is passed by the President. The President,
therefore, has the power to appoint as well as to remove a
Judge from his office on the ground of
226
proved misbehaviour or incapacity as provided in Article
124 of the Constitution. The President, therefore, being
the authority competent to appoint and to remove a Judge,
of course in accordance with the procedure envisaged in
Article 124, clauses (4) and (5) of the Constitution, may be
deemed to be the authority to grant sanction for prosecution
of a Judge under the provisions of Section 6(1)(c) in re-
spect of the offences provided in section 5(1)(e) of the
Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947. In order to adequately
protect a Judge from frivolous prosecution and unnecessary
harassment the President will consult the Chief Justice of
India who will consider all the materials placed before him
and tender his advice to the President for giving sanction
to launch prosecution or for filing FIR against the Judge
concerned after being satisfied in the matter. The President
shall act in accordance with advice given by the Chief
Justice of India If the Chief Justice of India. If the chief
Justices of opinion that it is not a fit case for grant of
sanction for prosecution of the Judge concerned the Presi-
dent shall not accord sanction to prosecute the Judge;This
will save the Judge concerned from unnecessary harassment as
weal as from frivolous prosecution against him as suggested
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by my learned brother Shetty, J. in his judgment. Similarly
in the case of Chief Justice of the Supreme Court the Presi-
dent shall consult such of the Judges of the Supreme Court
as he may deem fit and proper and the President shall act in
accordance with the advice given to him by the Judge or
Judges of the Supreme Court. The purpose of grant of previ-
ous sanction before prosecuting a public servant i.e. a
Judge of the High Court or of the Supreme Court is to pro-
tect the Judge from unnecessary harassment and frivolous
prosecution more particularly to save the Judge from the
biased prosecution for giving judgment in a case which goes
against the Government or its officers though’based on good
reasons and rule of law. Mention may be made in this connec-
tion to the decision in C.K. Daphtary v.O.P. Gupta, A.I.R.
197 1 SC 1132, wherein it has been observed:
"It seems to us that whoever drafted the
Impeachment Motion drafted it with a view to
bring the facts within the meaning of the
express "misbehaviour" in Article 124(4) for
he must have realised that to say that a Judge
has committed errors, even gross errors,
cannot amount to "misbehaviour".
The contention that frivolous prosecution can be launched
against a Judge for giving a judgment against the Central
Government or any of its Officers is of no avail in as much
as such decision does not amount to misbehaviour within the
meaning of the Article 124 of the Constitution.
227
It is also necessary to mention in this connection that
the appellant resigned his post of Chief Justice when FIR
was lodged by the CBI and so he ceased to be a public serv-
ant on the date of lodging the FIR against him by the CBI.
The scope and applicability of section 6 of the Prevention
of Corruption Act came to be considered in the case of R.S.
Nayak v.A.R. Antulay, [1984] 2 SCR 495 before a Constitution
Bench of this Court where it has been observed:
"Section 6 bars the Court from taking cogni-
zance of the offences therein enumerated
alleged to have been committed by a public
servant except with the previous sanction of
the competent authority empowered to grant the
requisite sanction ............. Section 6
creates a bar to the court from taking cogni-
zance of offences therein enumerated except
with the previous sanction of the authority
set out in clause (a) (b) & (c) of sub-sec.
(I),. The object underlying such provision Was
to save the public servant from the harassment
of frivolous or unsubstantiated allegations.
The policy underlying Sec. 6 and similar
sections, is that there should not be unneces-
sary harassment of public servant (C.R. Bansi
v. State of Maharashtra), [1971] 3 S.C.R. 236.
Existence thus of a valid sanction is a pre-
requisite to the taking of cognizance of the
enumerated offences alleged to have been
committed by a public servant. The bar is to
the taking of cognizance of offence by the
court. Therefore, when the court is called
upon to take cognizance of such offences, it
must enquire whether there is a valid sanction
to prosecute the public servant for the of-
fence alleged to have been committed by him as
public servant. Undoubtedly the accused must
be a public’ servant when he is alleged to
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have committed the offence of which he is
accused because Sections 161, 164, 165 IPC and
Sec. 5(2) of the 1947 Act clearly spell out
that the offences therein defined can be
committed by a public servant. If it is con-
templated to prosecute public servant who has
committed such offences, when the court is
called upon to take cognizance of the offence,
a sanction ought to be available otherwise the
court would have no jurisdiction to take
cognizance of the offence. A trial without a
valid sanction where one is necessary under
section 6 has been held to be a trial without
jurisdiction by the court. (R.R. Chari v.
State of U.P., and S.N. Bose v. State of
Bihar), In Mohd. Iqbal Ahmed v. State of A.P.,
it was held that the terminus
228
a quo for a valid sanction is the time when
the court is called upon to take cognizance of
the offence. Therefore, when the offence is
alleged to have been committed the accused was
a public servant but by the time the court is
called upon to take cognizance of the offence
committed by him as public servant, he has
ceased to be public servant, no sanction would
be necessary for taking cognizance of the
offence against him. This approach is in
accord with the policy underlying Sec. 6 in
that a public servant is not to be exposed to
harassment of a frivolous or speculative
prosecution. If he has ceased to be a public
servant in the meantime, this vital considera-
tion ceases to exist."
In the present appeal the appellant ceases to be a public
servant as h. resigned from the office. Therefore at the
time of filing the FIR the appellant ceases to be a public
servant and so no sanction under Sec. 6(1)(c) of the said
act is necessary. The main plank of the argument regarding
sanction is, therefore, non-existent.
In these circumstances the judgment and order of the
High Court dismissing the application under Secll. 482 of
the Code of Criminal Procedure is in my considered opinion,
wholly in accordance with law and as such the Order of the
High Court has to be upheld in any circumstances. I agree
with the conclusion of my learned brother Shetty, J. The
appeal is, therefore, dismissed. The trial of Criminal Case
No. 46/77 filed by the Respondent be proceeded with.
K. JAGANNATHA SHETTY, J. This appeal by certificate
under Articles 132(1) and 134(1)(e) of the Constitution has
been filed by the former Chief Justice of the Madras High
Court against the Full Bench decision of the same High Court
refusing to quash the criminal proceedings taken against
him. The appeal raises the questions of singular importance
and consequence to Judges of the High Courts and this Apex
Court. The central issue is whether the Judges could be
prosecuted for offence under the Prevention of Corruption
Act, 1947 (’the Act’).
The background of the case in the barest outline is as
follows: The appellant started his life as an Advocate in
the High Court of Madras. He joined the Madras Bar in 1941.
In 1953 he was appointed as Assistant Government Pleader. In
1959 he became Government Pleader. He held that post till 20
February 1960 when he was elevated to the Bench as a perma-
nent Judge of the Madras High Court. On
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229
1 May 1969, he became the Chief Justice of the Madras High
Court. During his tenure as the Judge and Chief Justice he
was said to have acquired assets disproportionate to the
known source of income. The complaint in this regard was
made to the Delhi Special Police Establishment ("CBI"). On
24 February 1976, the CBI registered a case against him with
issuance of a First Information Report which was filed in
one of the Courts at New Delhi. It was alleged in the First
Information Report that taking into consideration the
sources of income of the appellant as a Judge and Chief
Justice of the High Court and the mode and style of his
living with the probable expenses required during the period
of his Judgeship/Chief Justiceship, it is reasonably be-
lieved that the appellant cannot satisfactorily account fox
the possession of assets which are far disproportion he to
his known source of income. It was further alleged that he
has committed offences under Section 5(2) read with clauses
(b)(d) and (e) of Section 5(1) of the Act. On 28 February
1976, a copy of the First Information Report was personally
taken by the Investigating Officer to Madras and it was
filed before the Court of Special Judge, Madras. The appel-
lant on coming to know of these developments proceeded on
leave from 9 March 1976 and subsequently retired on 8 April
1976 on attaining the age of superannuation.
The investigation of the case by CBI was however, con-
tinued with the culmination of filing a final report. On 15
December 1977, a final report under Section 173(2) of the
Code of Criminal ’Procedure (Cr. P.C.) was filed against the
appellant before the Special Judge, Madras. The report under
Section 173(2) is generally called as the charge sheet, and
we would also prefer to term it as the charge sheet. The
charge sheet inter alia states that the appellant after
assuming. office as the Chief Justice of Madras gradually
commenced accumulation of disproportionate assets etc. That
for the period between 1 May 1969 to 24 February 1976, he
was in possession of the pecuniary resources and property
disproportionate by Rs.6.41,416.36 to the known sources of
income over the same period. It was in his own name and in
the names of his wife Smt. Eluthai Ammal and his two sons
Shri V. Suresh and Shri V. Bhaskar. The appellant cannot
satisfactorily account for such disproportionate assets. The
appellant has thereby committed the offence of criminal
misconduct under clause (e) of Section 5(1) which is punish-
able under Section 5(2) of the Act. The particulars of the
disproportionate assets and the income of the appellant
during the aforesaid period have been fully set out in the
charge sheet. On perusing the charge sheet the learned
Special Judge appears to have issued process for appearance
of the appellant but the appel-
230
lant did not appear there. He moved the High Court of
Madras under Section 482 of the Cr. P.C. to quash that
criminal proceedings before the High Court he contended that
the proceedings initiated against him were unconstitutional,
wholly without jurisdiction, illegal and void. The Full
Bench of the High Court by majority view has dismissed his
case. However, in view of the importance of the Constitu-
tional questions involved in the case the High Court
granted certificate for appeal to this Court.
It may be noted that before the High Court every
conceivable point was argued. They are various and varied.
We may briefly refer to those contentions not for the pur-
pose of examining them, since most of them have not been
pressed before us, but only to indicate as to how the appel-
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lant projected his case. It was inter alia, contended that
the Judges of the High Court and Supreme Court shall not be
answerable before the ordinary criminal courts but only
answerable to Parliament. The Parliament alone could deal
with their misbehaviour under the provisions of Articles
124(4) and (5) read with Articles 217 and 218 of the Consti-
tution. The Judge shall hold office until the age of super-
annuation subject to earlier removal for proved misbehaviour
or incapacity. This protection to Judges will be defeated if
they are compelled to stand trial for offence committed
while discharging duties of their office even before retire-
ment. Even the Parliament or the State Legislatures are not
competent to make laws creating offences in matters relating
to discharge of Judge’s duties. Any such law would vitiate
the scheme and the federal structure of the Constitution
particularly the scheme of Article 124(4) read with Article
2 17 and 2 18. If the Legislatures are held to have powers
to create offence for which Judges could be tried in ordi-
nary criminal Courts then, it may affect the very independ-
ence of the Judiciary and the basic structure of the Consti-
tution. Though the definition of "public servant" under
Section 21 of the Indian Penal Code may include a Judge of
the Higher Judiciary, since the Judge is not ’employed in
connection with the affairs of the Union or State’, the
definition Should be narrowed down only to Judges other man
the Judges of the Higher Judiciary.
The jurisdiction of the CBI to register the case
against the appellant and to investigate the offence was
also questioned. The issuance of the First Information
RepOrt and the subsequent filing of the charge sheet were
impeached. It was alleged that they were actuated by collat-
eral considerations. Alternatively, it was claimed that even
assuming that all the allegations against the appellant are
true, it will not constitute an offence under clause (e) of
Section 5(1) of the Act since ingredients of the offence are
not present in the case. The last and
231
perhaps the most important contention urged before the
High Court was regarding the necessity to obtain prior
sanction from the competent authority for prosecution of the
appellant as required under Section 6 of the Act. And since
there was no such sanction obtained the Court has no juris-
diction to take cognizance of the case.
Mr. Justice Mohan, with whom Mr. Justice Natarajan, (as
he then was) joined rejected all the contentions in a well
considered judgment. The views expressed by Mohan, J., on
all the issues except on the last one need not be set out
here since all those issues have not been raised before us.
On the last aspect relating to the requirement of prior
sanction for prosecution of the appellant, the learned
Judge, held that since the appellant has retired from serv-
ice and was no longer a ’public servant’ on the date of
filing the charge sheet, the sanction for his prosecution
required under Section 6 of the Act is not warranted. The
third Judge Mr. Justice Balasubramanyan in a separate judg-
ment has concurred with the majority views on most of the
questions. He has however, differed on three points out of
which one alone need be mentioned. The other two have not
been supported before us by counsel for the appellant. The
learned Judge has dealt with the ingredients of the offence
under clause (e) of Section 5(1) with which the appellant
was charged. While analysing ingredients of the offence, he
went on to state that the gist of the offence is not the
possession of assets merely. Nor even the sheer excess of
assets over income, but the inability of the public servant
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in not being able to satisfactorily account for the excess.
He observed that clause (e) of Section 5(1) of the Act
places the burden of establishing unsatisfactory accounting
squarely on the prosecution. In order to properly discharge
this burden cast by the section, it Would be necessary for
the Investigating Officer first of all to call upon the
public servant to account for the disproportionate assets.
He must then proceed to record his own finding on the expla-
nation of the public servant. He must state whether it is
satisfactory or not. And the offence complained of under
clause (e) of Section 5(1) is not made out without such
exercise and finding by the Investigating Officer. The
learned Judge, however, was careful enough to modulate his
reasoning so that it may be in conformity with the constitu-
tional protection guaranteed to the accused under Article
20(3) of the Constitution, Article 20(3) provides that no
person accused of any offence shall be compelled to be a
witness against himself. The learned Judge said that in view
of Article 20(3) the Investigating Officer has no power to
compel the accused to give his explanation for his dispro-
portionate assets, but he must necessarily ask the public
servant for an account.
232
In this case. the accused-appellant has voluntarily
submitted his statement of assets and income to the Investi-
gating Officer in the course of investigation. Balasubraman-
yan, J., however, seems to have ignored that statement and
focussed his attention on the default of the Investigating
Officer in not calling upon the appellant to account for the
disproportionate assets.’ In that view, he held that the
chargesheet could not be sustained and accordingly quashed
the prosecution.
Before us, counsel for the appellant advanced only two
propositions. The first concerns with the ingredients of the
offence alleged and the requirements of the charge-sheet
filed against the appellant. It also involves the duties of
the Investigating Officer. In this regard counsel sought to
support the views expressed by Balasubramanyan, J., in his
dissenting judgment. The second proposition relates to the
inapplicability of the Act to Judges of the High Courts and
Supreme Court. The essence of the submissions made on this
aspect is based on the special status and role of Judges of
the higher judiciary and in the need to safeguard judicial
independence consistent with the constitutional provisions.
We will take up the second question first for considera-
tion because. if it is determined in favour of the appel-
lant, the first becomes academic and wc may conveniently
leave it out. For a proper consideration of the submissions
made by counsel on both sides the attention may be drawn to
the relevant provisions of the Act.
Section 2 provides:
"2. For the purposes of this Act, "public
servant" means a public servant as defined in
Section 21 of the Indian Penal Code."
Section 4 provides:
4. [(1)] Where in any trial of an of-
fence punishable under section 16 1 or section
165 of the Indian Penal Code (or of an offence
referred to in clause (a) or clause (b) of sub
section (1) of section 5 of this Act punisha-
ble under subsection (2) thereof), it is
proved that an accused person has accepted or
obtained, or has agreed to accept or attempted
to obtain, for himself or for any other per-
son, any gratification (other than legal
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remuneration) or any valuable thing
from any person, it shall be presumed unless
the contrary is
233
proved that he accepted or obtained, or agreed
to accept or attempted to obtain, that grati-
fication or that valuable thing, as the case
may be, as a motive or reward such as is
mentioned in the said section 161, or, as the
case may be, without consideration or for a
consideration which he knows to be inadequate.
(2) Where in any trial of an offence punisha-
ble under section 165A of the Indian Penal
Code (or under clause (ii) of sub-section (3)
of section 5 of this Act) it is proved that
any gratification (other than legal remunera-
tion) or any valuable thing has been given or
offered to be given or attempted to be given
by an accused person, it shall be presumed
unless the contrary is proved that he gave or
offered to give or attempted to give that
gratification or that valuable thing, as the
case may be as a motive or reward such as is
mentioned in section 161 of the Indian Penal
Code or, as the case may be without consider-
ation or for a consideration which he knows to
be inadequate.
(3) Notwithstanding anything contained in
sub-sections (1) and (2) the court may decline
to draw the presumption referred to in either
of the said sub-sections, if the gratification
or thing aforesaid is, in its opinion, so
trivial that no inference of corruption may
fairly be drawn."
Two other provisions are more material
namely section 5 and section 6 and must be set
out in full.
Section 5 provides:
"5(1) A public servant is said to commit the
offence of criminal misconduct-
(a) if he habitually accepts or obtains or
agrees to accept or attempts to obtain from
any person for himself or for any other per-
son, any gratification (other than legal
remuneration) as a motive or reward such as is
mentioned in section 161 of the Indian Penal
Code, or
(b) if he habitually accepts or obtains or
agrees to accept or attempts to obtain for
himself or for any other person, any valuable
thing without consideration or for a con-
234
sideration which he knows to be inadequate,
from any person whom he knows to have been, or
to be, or to be likely to be concerned in any
proceeding or business transacted or about to
be transacted by him, or having any connection
with the official functions of himself or of
any public servant to whom he is subordinate,
or from any person whom he knows to be inter-
ested in or related to the person so con-
cerned, or
(c) if he dishonestly or fraudulent|y misap-
propriates or otherwise converts for his own
use any property entrusted to him or under his
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control as a public servant or allows any
other person so to do, or
(d) if he, by corrupt or illegal means or by
otherwise abusing his position as public
servant, obtains for himself or for any other
person any valuable thing or pecuniary advan-
tage (or)
(e) if he or any person on his behalf is in
possession or has, at any time during the
period of his office, been in possession, for
which the public servant cannot satisfactorily
account, of pecuniary resources or property
disproportionate to his known sources of
income.
(2) Any public servant who commits criminal
misconduct shall be punishable with imprison-
ment for a term which shall not be less than
one year but which may extend to seven years
and shall also be liable to fine:
Provided that the court may, for any
special reasons recorded in writing, impose a
sentence of imprisonment of less than one
year.
(3) Whoever habitually commits-
(i) an offence punishable under
section 162 or section 163 of the Indian
Penal Code, or
(ii) an offence punishable under
section 165 A of the Indian Penal Code,
shall be punishable with imprisonment for a
term which
235
shall not be less than one year but which may
extend to seven years, and shall also be
liable to fine:
Provided that the court may, for any special
reasons recorded in writing, impose a sentence
of imprisonment of less than one year.
(3A) Whoever attempts to commit an offence
referred to in clause (c) or clause (d) of
sub-section (1) shall be punishable with
imprisonment for a term which may extend to
three years, or with fine, or with both.
(3B) Where a sentence of fine is imposed under
subsection (2) or sub-section (3), the court
in fixing the amount of fine shall take into
consideration the amount or the value of the
property, if any, which the accused person has
obtained by committing the offence or where
the conviction is for an offence referred to
in clause (e) of subsection (1), the pecuniary
resources or property referred to in that
clause for which the accused person is unable
to account satisfactorily.
(4) The provisions of this section shall be in
addition to, and not in derogation of, any
other law for the time being in force, and
nothing contained herein shall exempt any
public servant from any proceeding which
might, apart from this section, be instituted
against him.
Section 6 is in the following terms:
"6. No court shall take cognizance of an
offence punishable under section 161 (or
section 164) or section 165 of the Indian
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Penal Code, or under sub-section (2) (or sub-
section 3A) of section 5 of this Act, alleged
to have been committed by a public servant,
except with the previous sanction,
(a) in the case of a person who is employed in
connection with the affairs of the (Union) and
is not removable from his office save by or
with the sanction of the Central Government
(of the) State Government;
(b) in the case of a person who is employed in
connection with the affairs of (a State) and
is not removable from his
236
office save by or with the sanction of the
Central Government (of the) State Government
(c) in the case of any other person, of the
authority competent to remove him from his
office.
(2) Where for any reason whatsoever any doubt
arises whether the previous sanction as re-
quired under sub-section (1) should be given
by the Central or State Government or any
other authority, such sanction shall be given
by that Government or authority which would
have been competent to remove the public
servant from his office at the time when the
offence was alleged to have been committed.
It will be convenient, if at this stage, we also read
Section Omitting the immaterial clauses, Section 5A is in
these terms:
"5A. Notwithstanding anything contained in the
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898, no police
officer below the rank -
(a) in the case of the Delhi Special Police
Establishment, of an Inspector of Police;
(b) in the presidency-towns of Calcutta and
Madras, of an Assistant Commissioner of Po-
lice;
(c) in the presidency-towns of Bombay, of a
Superintendent of Police; and
(d) elsewhere, of a Deputy Superintendent of
Police,
shall investigate any offence punishable under
Section 161, section 165 or section 165A of
the Indian Penal Code or under section 5 of
this Act without the order of a Presidency
Magistrate or a Magistrate of the first class,
as the case may be, or make any arrest there-
for without a warrant:
Provided that if a police officer not below
the rank of an Inspector of Police is autho-
rised by the State Government in this behalf
by general or special order, he may also
investigate any such offence without the order
of a Presi-
237
dency Magistrate or a Magistrate of the first
class, as the case may be, or make arrest
therefor without a warrant:
Provided further that an offence referred to
in clause (e) of sub-section (1) of Section 5
shall not be investigated without the order of
a police officer not below the rank of a
Superintendent of Police.
The Act was intended to suppress bribery and corruption
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in public administration and it contains stringent provi-
sions. Section 4 raises presumption unless the contrary is
proved by the accused in respect of offence punishable under
section 161 or section 165 of the Indian Penal Code or of an
offence referred to in clause (a) or clause (b) of section
5(1) of the Act. Section 5 of the Act creates offence of
criminal misconduct on the part of a public servant. The
public servant defined under section 2 means a public serv-
ant as defined in Section 21 of the IPC. Section 21 of the
IPC is not really defining "public servant" but enumerating
the categories of public servants. It has enumerated as many
as twelve categories of public servants. Section 5(2) pro-
vides punishment for such an offence of criminal misconduct
up to a term of 7 years or with fine, or with both. Section
6 prohibits Courts from taking cognizance of an offence
unless certain condition is complied with. We will have an
occasion to consider the provisions of Section 6 in detail
and for the present we may deal only with the condition
prescribed by the Section for a Court to take cognizance of
an offence The condition prescribed therein is the previous
sanction of a competent authority. The public servant cannot
be prosecuted for offences specified in the Section unless
there is prior sanction for prosecution from the competent
authority. It may be of importance to remember that the
power to take cognizance of an offence is vested in the
Court of competent jurisdiction. Section 6 is primarily
concerned to see that prosecution for the specified offences
shall not commence without the sanction of a competent
authority. That does not mean that the Act was intended to
condone the offence of bribery. and corruption by public
servant. Nor it was meant to afford protection to public
servant from criminal prosecution for such offences. It is
only to protect the honest public servants from frivolous
and vexatious prosecution. The competent authority has to
examine independently and impartially the material on record
to form his own opinion whether the offence alleged is
frivolous or vexatious. The competent authority may refuse
sanction for prosecution if the offence alleged has no
material to support or it is frivolous or intended to harass
the honest officer. But he cannot refuse to grant sanction
if the material collected has made out
238
the commission of the offence alleged against the public
servant. Indeed he is duty bound to grant sanction if the
material collected lend credence to the offence complained
of. There seems to be another reason for taking away the
discretion of the investigating agency to prosecute or not
to prosecute a public servant. When a public servant is
prosecuted for an offence which challenges his honesty and
integrity, the issue in such a case is not only between the
prosecutor and the offender, but the State is also vitally
concerned with it as it affects the morale of public serv-
ants and also the administrative interest of the State. The
discretion to prosecute public servant is taken away from
the prosecuting agency and is vested in the authority which
is competent to remove the public servant. The authority
competent to remove the public servant would be in a better
position than the prosecuting agency to assess the material
collected in a dispassionate and reasonable manner and
determine whether sanction for prosecution of a public
servant deserves to be granted or not.
Section 6 may now be analysed. Clause (a) of Section
6(1) covers public servants employed in connection with the
affairs of the Union. The prescribed authority for giving
prior sanction for such persons would be the Central Govern-
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ment. Clause (b) of Section 6(1) covers public servants
employed in connection with the affairs of the State. The
authority competent to give prior sanction for prosecution
of such persons would be the State Government. Clauses (a)
and (b) would thus cover the cases of public servants who
are employed in connection with the affairs of the Union or
State and are not removable from their office save by or
with the sanction of the Central Government or the State
Government. That is not the end. The Section goes further in
clause (c) to cover the remaining categories of public
servants. Clause (c) states that in the case of any other
person the sanction would be of the authority competent to
remove him from his office. Section 6 is thus all embracing
bringing within its fold all the categories of public serv-
ants as defined under Section 21 of the IPC.
It is common ground that clauses (a) and (b) of Section
6(1) of the Act cannot cover the Judges of the High Courts
and the Supreme Court since they are not employed in connec-
tion with the affairs of the Union or State. The question is
whether they could be brought within the purview of clause
(c) of Section 6(1). Mr. Kapil Sibal learned Counsel for the
appellant stressed the need to read clause (c) in "ejusdem
generis" to clauses (a) and (b). According to him the entire
Section 6 seems to apply only to such public servants where
there is relationship of master and servant between, them
and their employer.
239
If there is no relationship of master and servant, as be-
tween public servant and the authority to appoint him,
clause (c) has no application to the public servant. So far
as the Judges of the High Courts and the Supreme Court are
concerned, it was contended that there is no relationship of
master and servant between them and the Government.and
clause (c) of Section 6(1) is inapplicable to them.
It is true that the relationship of master and servant
as is ordinarily understood in common law does not exist
between the Judges of higher judiciary and the Government.
Where there is relationship of master and servant the master
would be in commanding position. He has power over the
employee not only to direct what work the servant is to do,
but also the manner in which the work is to be done. The
servant undertakes to serve the master and obey the reasona-
ble orders within the scope of his duty. It is implicit in
such relationship that the servant may disobey the master’s
order only at his peril. But there is no such relationship
between the Judges and their appointing authority that is,
the Government. The Judges are not bound nor do they under-
take to obey any order of the Government within the scope of
their duties. Indeed, they are not Judges if they allow
themselves to be guided by the Government in the performance
of their duties. In Union of India v. S.H. Sheth, [1978] 1
SCR 423 at 450 Chandrachud, J., as he then was, has illu-
mined this idea: "the Judges owe their appointment to the
Constitution and hold a position of privilege under it. They
are required to ’uphold the Constitution and the laws’,
’wit-hout fear’ that is without fear of the Executive; and
’without favour’ that is without expecting a favour from the
Executive. There is thus a fundamental distinction between
the master and servant relationship between the Government
and the Judges of High Courts and the Supreme Court." But we
cannot accept the contention urged for the appellant that
clause (c) should be read in "ejusdem generis" to clauses
(a) and (b) of Section 6(1) of the Act. The application of
the ejusdem generis rule is only to general word following
words which are less general, or the general word following
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particular and specific words of the same nature. In such a
case, the general word or expression is to be read as com-
prehending only things of the same kind as that designated
by the preceding specific words or expressions. The ’general
word is presumed to be restricted to the same genus as those
of the particular and specific words. (See Maxwell on The
Interpretation of Statutes, 12th Ed. p. 297). What do we
have here? Section 21 of the IPC while defining "public
servant" has denoted as many as twelve categories of per-
sons. It includes not only the State and Central Government
employees but also others like Judge, juryman, assessor
240
and arbitrator. It also includes every person in the service
or pay of the Government or remunerated by fees or commis-
sion by the Government. Each category is different from
other and there is hardly any relationship of master and
servant in some of the categories. The provisions of clauses
(a) and (b) of Section 6(1) of the Act covers certain cate-
gories of public servants and the ’other’ which means re-
maining categories are brought within the scope of clause
(c). Clause (c) is independent of and separate from the
preceding two clauses. The structure oil the section does
not permit the applicability of the rule of ejusdem generis.
There are, however, two requirements for the applicabil-
ity of clause (c) of Section 6(1) to a Judge of the higher
judiciary. First, the Judge must be a public servant. Sec-
ond, there must be an authority competent to remove the
Judge from his office. If these two requirements are com-
plied with, a Judge cannot escape from the operation on the
Act. On the first requirement there is little doubt and also
not seriously disputed by counsel for the appellant. His
approach however, is to limit the operation of clause (c)
only to Judges of the Subordinate judiciary. But we do not
find any sustainance in that approach. From the very com-
mencement of the IPC "Every Judge" finds a place in the
categories of "public servant" defined under Section 21 of
IPC. It was specifically denoted in the third category of
public servant under Section 21 of IPC.
In 1962, the Government of India constituted a Committee
chaired by C.K. Santhanam, MP to suggest improvements in the
provisions of the Act. Nine specific terms of references
were made to the Committee. The Fourth term of reference
made to the Committee reads: "to suggest changes in law
which would ensure speedy trial of cases of bribery, corrup-
tion and criminal misconduct, and make the law otherwise
more effective." The Committee collected a lot of material
from the public relating to the nature of corruption in the
administration. It was represented to the Committee by the
public that corruption has increased to such an extent that
people have started losing faith in the integrity of public
administration. "We heard from all sides", the Committee
reported, "that corruption has, in recent years, spread even
to those levels of administration from which it was conspic-
uously absent in the past." (See: Santhanam Committee Re-
port, paras 2.12,2.15 and 2.16). The Committee submitted its
report on 31st March 1964. While examining the Fourth term
of reference extracted above, the Committee in Section 7 of
its report considered the question of amendments to the IPC.
The Committee drew particular
241
attention to the definition of ’public servant’ in Section
21 of the IPC. Under paragraph 7.6 of the Report, the Com-
mittee has suggested that the present definition of ’public
servant’ under Section 21 of the IPC requires to be en-
larged. It has stated, among others that ’a further category
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should be added to include all persons discharging adjudica-
tory functions under any Union or State Law for the time
being in force.’ Under para 7.7, the Committee recommended
that the third category under Section 21 of the IPC may be
amended as stated below:
"Third-Every Judge including any person en-
trusted with adjudicatory functions in the
course of enforcement of any law for the time
being in force."
This recommendation led to the enactment of Anti Corrup-
tion Laws (Amendment) Act 1964 (Act No. 40 of 1964), The
Parliament by passing this enactment has reenacted Section
21 with the third category as follows:
"21. ’public servant’-The words ’public serv-
ant’ denote a person falling under any of the
descriptions hereinafter following, namely;
Third--Every Judge including any person empow-
ered by; law to discharge, whether by himself
or as a member of any body of persons, any
adjudicatory functions."
It will be seen that the Parliament has not only retained
the expression "Every Judge" in the original enumeration of
public servant under Section 21 of the IPC but also enlarged
the expression to include any person empowered by law to
discharge any adjudicatory functions. Reference may also be
made to Section 19 of the IPC, in which "Judge" is defined.
Section 19 reads:
"19. "Judge"-The word "Judge" denotes not only
every person who is officially designated as a
Judge, but also every person
who is empowered by law to give, in any legal
proceeding, civil or criminal, a definitive
judgment, or a judgment which, if not appealed
against, would be definitive, or a judgment
which, if confirmed by some other authority,
would be definitive, or
242
who is one of a body of persons, which body of
persons is empowered by law to give such a
judgment."
The expression "Every Judge" used in the third category
of Section 21 indicates all Judges and all Judges of all
Courts. It is a general term and general term in the Act
should not be narrowly construed. It must receive comprehen-
sive meaning unless there is positive indication to the
contrary. There is no such indication to the contrary in the
Act. A Judge of the superior Court cannot therefore be
excluded from the definition of public servant. He squarely
falls within the purview of the Act provided the second
requirement under clause (c) of Section 6(1) is satisfied
The second requirement for attracting the provisions of
clause (c) of Section 6(1) to a Judge of the superior Judi-
ciary is that for the purpose of granting sanction for his
prosecution, there must be an authority and the authority
must be competent to remove the Judge. It is now necessary
to identify such authority in relation to the higher judici-
ary. In our country, the Judges of higher Judiciary are safe
and secure. They are high dignitaries and constitutional
functionaries. They are appointed by the President in the
exercise of his executive power but they are independent of
the Executive. They hold office till they attain the age of
superannuation. The High Court Judge retires at 62, while
the Supreme Court Judge retires at 65. They are liable to be
removed for proved misbehaviour or incapacity. The Executive
is competent to appoint the Judges but not empowered to
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remove them. The power to remove them is vested in Parlia-
ment by the process analogous to impeachment. The power is
located under Article 124 of the Constitution. Article 124
provides, so far as material, as follows:
"124. Establishment and constitution of Su-
preme Court-
XXXXX XXXXX XXXXX
(4) A Judge of the Supreme Court shall not be
removed from his office except by an order of
the President passed after an address by each
House of Parliament supported by a majority of
the total membership of that House and by a
majority of not less than two-thirds of the
members of that House present and voting has
been presented to the President in the same
session for such removal on the ground of
proved misbehaviour or incapacity.
243
(5) Parliament may by law regulate the proce-
dure for the presentation of an address and
for the investigation and proof of the misbe-
haviour or incapacity of a Judge under clause
(4).
Article 2 18 provides that the provisions of clauses (4)
and (5) of Article 124 shall apply in relation to a High
Court as they apply in relation to the Supreme Court.
In exercise of the power vested under clause (5) of Article
124, the Parliament has passed the Judges (Inquiry) Act,
1968 prescribing
the procedure for presentation of an address and for the
investigation and proof of misbehaviour or incapacity of a
Judge. It will be useful to refer to the relevant provisions
of the Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968. Section 3(1) provides for
giving notice of a motion for presenting an address to the
President praying for the removal of a Judge, (a) in the
case of a notice of motion given in the House of the People,
it should be signed by not less than one hundred members of
that House; (b) in the case of a notice given in the Council
of States, it should be signed by not less than fifty mem-
bers of that Council. The notice of motion should be given
to the Speaker or, as the case may be, to the Chairman who
may, after consulting such persons, as he thinks fit and
after considering such materials, if any, as may be avail-
able to him, either admit the motion or refuse to admit the
same. Section 3(2) states that if the motion referred to in
sub-section (1) is admitted, the Speaker or, as the case may
be, the Chairman shall constitute a Committee for making an
investigation into the grounds on which the removal of a
Judge is prayed for. There shall be three members of the
Committee; of whom one shall be chosen from among the Chief
Justice and other Judges of the Supreme Court; one shall be
chosen from among the Chief Justices of the High Courts and
one shall be a person who is, in the opinion of the Speaker
or, as the case may be, the Chairman, a distinguished ju-
rist. The section further provides that the Committee shall
frame definite charges against the Judge on the basis of
which the investigation is proposed to be held and the Judge
shall be given a reasonable opportunity of presenting a
written statement of defence. There are Rules called the
Judges (Inquiry) Rules, 1969 formed under the Judges (En-
quiry) Act prescribing procedure for holding an inquiry
against the Judge. Section 4(1) of the Judges (Inquiry) Act,
1968 states that at the conclusion of the investigation, the
Committee shall submit its report to the Speaker or, as the
case may be, to the Chairman, stating therein its findings
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’on each of the charges separately with such observations on
the whole case as he thinks fit. The Speaker or the -
244
Chairman, as the case may be, shall cause that report to be
laid before the House of People and the Council of States.
Section 6 provides that if the report of Committee contains
a finding that the Judge is not guilty of any misbehaviour
or does not suffer from any incapacity, then, no further
step be taken in either House of Parliament
Section 6(2) states that if the report of the Committee
contains a finding that the Judge is guilty of any misbeha-
viour or suffers from any incapacity, then, each House of
Parliament shall take further steps. The motion to present
an address to the President together with the report of the
Committee, shall be taken up for consideration by the House
in which it is pending. That address praying for removal of
the Judge must be adopted by each House of Parliament in
accordance with the provisions of clause (4) of Article 124.
Clause (4) of Article 124 provides that the address must be
passed by each House of Parliament supported by a majority
of the total membership of that House and by a majority ofi
not less than two-thirds of the members of that House
present and voting. Thereafter it shall be presented to the
President for removal of the Judge. Incidentally, it may be
mentioned that the same procedure has been made applicable
for removal of the Comptroller and Auditor-General of India.
(See clause (1) of Article 148 and for removal of the Chief
Election Commissioner. (See clause (5) of Article 324 of the
Constitution.
Counsel for the appellant while referring to the afore-
mentioned provisions of the Constitution pointed out that
the power to remove a Judge is not vested in any single
individual or authority. No single person or authority is
competent to take even cognizance of any allegation of
misconduct of a Judge, or to take legal action for his
removal. The power to remove a Judge is vested in the two
Houses of Parliament and the President. The process and
power are ’both integrated in Parliament and Parliament
alone is competent to remove a Judge. But Parliament, coun-
sel contended, cannot be the sanctioning authority for the
prosecution of a Judge. The grant of sancricrequires consid-
eration of material collected by the investigation agency
and Parliament cannot properly consider the material. Par-
liament is wholly unsuitable to that work. It would be
reasonable to presume that the Legislature while enacting
clause (c) of Section 6(1) of the Act could not have intend-
ed Parliament to be the sanctioning authority. The other
authority cannot be involved to grant sanction for prosecu-
tion of a Judge since it would be inconsistent with the
provisions of the Act and the Constitutional requirements.
Counsel asserted that it is necessary to exclude the Judges
of the Supreme Court and of
245
the High Courts from the operation of the Act.
Mr. Tulsi, learned Additional Solicitor General, on the
other hand, emphasised on the role of the President in
relation to removal of a Judge. He pointed out that the
order of the President for removal of a Judge is imperative
under clause (4) of Article 124 of the Constitution and the
President could be the proper authority under clause (c) of
Section 6(1) of the Act.
Such, then, put quite shortly, were the contentions
addressed to us on the authority competent to grant sanction
for prosecution of Judges of the superior judiciary.
We agree with counsel for the appellant that Parliament
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could not have been intended to be the sanctioning authority
under clause (c) of Section 6(1). The composition of Parlia-
ment consisting of the President and two Houses (Article 79)
makes it unsuitable to the task. The nature of transacting
business or proceeding in each House renders it impractica-
ble. The individual Member of the House takes part in a
proceeding usually by speech and voting; but the conduct of
Judge in the discharge of his duties cannot be discussed.
Article 121 provides "that no discussion shall take place in
Parliament with respect to the conduct of any Judge of the
Supreme Court or of a High’ Court in the discharge of his
duties except upon a motion for presenting an address to the
President praying for the removal of the Judge as hereinaf-
ter provided." The only exception made in the Constitution
for discussion on the conduct of a Judge is when the motion
is taken up for his removal. On no other occasion the con-
duct of a Judge in the discharge of duties could be the
subject matter of discussion in the two Houses of Parlia-
ment. Without discussion, it would be difficult for Parlia-
ment to make an objective judgment with regard to grant of
sanction for prosecution. Parliament cannot therefore be the
proper authority for granting sanction for the prosecution
of a Judge.
That does not however, follow that the Judges of superi-
or Courts are entitled to be excluded from the scope of the
Act as contended for the appellant. That would be defeating
the object of the Act. The Act was intended to cover all
categories of public servants. The apparent policy of the
legislation is to insure a clean public administration by
weeding out corrupt officials. The Preamble of the Act
indicates that the Act was intended to prevent more effec-
tively the bribery and corruption by public servants. This
Court has an occasion to examine the broad outlines of the
Act. Imam. J., in S.A. Venkataraman v. The
246
State, [1958] SCR 1040 while, analysing the provisions of
the Act observed (at 1048): "that the provisions of the Act
indicate that it was intention of the legislature to treat
more severely than hitherto corruption on the part of a
public servant and not to condone it in any manner whatsoev-
er." Reference may also be made to the observations of Subba
Rao. J., as he then was, in M. Narayanan v. State of Kerala,
[1963] 2 Suppl. SCR 724. The learned Judge said that the Act
is a socially useful measure conceived in the public inter-
est and it should be liberally constured. To quote his own
words (at 729):
"The Preamble indicates that the Act was
passed as it was expedient to make more effec-
tive provisions for the prevention of bribery
and corruption. The long title as well as the
preamble indicate that the Act was passed to
put down the said social evil i.e. bribery and
corruption by public Servant. Bribery is a
form of corruption. The fact that in addition
to the word ’bribery’ the word ’corruption’ is
used shows that the legislation was intended
to combat also other evils in additon to
bribery. The existing law. i.e. Penal Code was
found insufficient to eradicate or even to
control the growing evil of bribery and cor-
ruption corroding the public service of our
country. The provisions broadly include the
existing offences under ss. 161 and 165 of the
Indian Penal Code committed by public servants
and enact a new rule of presumptive evidence
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against the accused. The Act also creates a
new offence of criminal misconduct by
public servants though to some extent it
overlaps on the pre-existing offences and
enacts a rebuttable presumption contrary to
the well-known principles of Criminal Juris-
prudence. It also aims to protect honest
public servants from harassment by prescribing
that the investigation against them could be
made only by police officials of particular
status and by making the sanction of the
Government or other appropriate officer a
pre-condition for their prosecution. As it is
a socially useful measure conceived in public
interest, it should be liberally construed so
as to bring about the desired object i.e. to
prevent corruption among public servants and
to prevent harassment of the honest among
them."
In Craies on Statute Law. (6th ed. p. 531) it is
stated that "the distinction between a strict and a liberal
construction has almost disappeared with regard to all
classes of statutes, so that all statutes,
247
whether penal or not, are now construed by substantially the
same rules ..... They are construed now with reference to
the true meaning and real intention of the Legislature." The
construction which would promote the general legislative
purpose underlying the provision in question, is to be
preferred to a construction which would not. If the literal
meaning of the legislative language used would lead to
results which would defeat the purpose of the Act the Court
would be justified in disregarding the literal meaning and
adopt a liberal construction which effectuates the object of
the legislature. Section 6, with which we are concerned
indeed, requires to be liberally construed. It is not a
penal provision but a measure of protection to public serv-
ants in the penal enactment. It indicates the authorities
without whose sanction a public servant cannot be prosecut-
ed. It is sufficient that the authorities prescribed there-
under fall within the fair sense of the language of the
Section. The expression "the authority competent to remove"
used in clause (c) of Section 6(1) is to be construed to
mean also an authority without whose order or affirmation
the public servant cannot be removed. In this view, the
President can be considered as the authority to grant sanc-
tion for prosecution of a Judge since the order of the
President for the removal of a Judge is mandatory, The
motion passed by each House of Parliament with the special
procedure prescribed under clause (4) of Article 124 will
not proprio vigore operate against the judge. It will not
have the consequence of removing the Judge from the office
unless it is followed by an order of the President.
The importance of an order of the President for removal
of a Judge could be seen by contrasting the provisions of
clause (4) of Article 124 with the provisions for removal of
the President, VicePresident and Speaker. Article 61 pro-
vides procedure for removal of the President of India.
Clause (4) of Article 61 reads as follows:
"61(4) If as a result of the investigation a
resolution is passed by a majority of not less
than two-thirds of the total membership of the
House by which the charge was investigated or
caused to be investigated, declaring that the
charge preferred against the President has
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been sustained, such resolution shall have the
effect of removing the President from his
office as from the date on which the resolu-
tion is so passed."
Similar is the consequence of passing the resolution for
removal of the Vice-President under Article 67 and the
Speaker under Article
248
94 of the Constitution. Article 67(b) of the Constitution
provides that the Vice-President may be removed from his
office by a resolution of the Council of States passed by a
majority of all the then members of the Council and agreed
to by the House of People. Article 94(c) provides that the
Speaker may be removed from his office by a resolution of
the House of the People passed by a majority of all the then
members of the House. The resolution passed in accordance
with the procedure prescribed under the respective provi-
sions for removing the President, Vice-President and the
Speaker, will ipso facto operate against those authorities.
No further order from any other authority for their removal
is necessary.
But that is not the position in the case of removal of a
Judge. Clause (4) of Article 124 mandates that "a Judge
shall not be removed from his office except by an order of
the President passed after an address by each House of
Parliament ..." The clause (4) is in the negative terms. The
order of the President is sine qua non for removal of a
Judge. The President alone could make that order.
It is said that Section 6 envisages that the authority
competent to remove a public servant from the office should
be vertically superior in the hierarchy in which the office
exists. Section 6 applies only in cases where there is a
vertical hierarchy of public offices and the public servants
against whom sanction is sought from the sanctioning author-
ity. Where the office held by the public servant is not a
part of vertical hierarchy in which there is an authority
above the public servant, then, Section 6 can have no appli-
cation. We have been referred to the observations of Desai
J., in R.S. Nayak v. A.R. Antulay, [1984] 2 SCC 183 at 206:
"That competent authority alone would know the
nature and function discharged by the public
servant holding the office and whether the
same has been abused or misused. It is the
vertical hierarchy between the authority
compete.. to remove the public servant from
that office and the nature of the office held
by the public servant against whom sanction is
sought which would indicate a hierarchy and
which would therefore, permit inference of
knowledge about the functions and duties of
the office and its misuse or abuse by the
public servant. That is why the Legislature
clearly provided that that authority alone
would be competent to grant sanction which is
entitled to remove the public servant against
whom sanction is sought from the office."
249
With the utmost respect, we are unable to agree with the
above observations. It seems to us that these observations
were not intended to lay down the law that the authority
competent to grant sanction for prosecution of public serv-
ant should be vertically superior in the hierarchy in which
the office of the public servant exists. That was not the
issue in that case. The observations therefore, are not
meant to be and ought not to be regarded as laying down the
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law. It has been said almost too frequently to require
repetition that judgments are not to be read as statutes. In
our opinion, it is not necessary that the authority compe-
tent to give sanction for prosecution or the authority
competent to remove the public servant should be vertically
superior in the hierarchy in which the, office of the public
servant exists. There is no such requirement under Section,
6. The power to give sanction for prosecution can be con-
ferred on any authority. Such authority may be of the de-
partment in which the public servant is working or an out-
side authority. All that is required is that the authority
must be in a position to appreciate the material collected
against the public servant to judge whether the prosecution
contemplated is frivolous or speculative Under our enact-
ment the power has been conferred on the authority competent
to remove the public servant. Under the British Prevention
of Corruption Act, 1906 the power to give consent for prose-
cution for an offence under that Act has been conferred upon
the Attorney General or Solicitor General.
The President is not an outsider so far judiciary is
concerned. The President appoints the Judges of the High
Courts and the Supreme Court in exercise of his executive
powers. Clause (1) of Article 217 provides that every Judge
of the High Court shall be appointed by the President after
consultation with the Chief Justice of India, the Governor
of the State, and in the case of appointment of a Judge
Other than the Chief Justice, the Chief Justice of the High
Court. Similarly the President appoints the Judges of the
Supreme Court. Clause (2) of Article 124 provides that every
Judge of the Supreme Court shah be appointed by the Presi-
dent in consultation with such of the Judges of the supreme
Court and of the High Courts as the President may deem
necessary for the purpose and in case of appointment of a
Judge other than the Chief Justice, the Chief Justice
of/India shall always be consulted. The President exercises
this power with the aid and advice of his Council of Minis-
ters under Article 74 of the Constitution. Shamsher Singh v.
State of Punjab, [ 1975] 1 SCR 8 14 and S.P. Gupta v. Union
of India, [1982] 2 SCR 365. Parliament has no part to play
in the matter of appointment of Judges except that the
Executive is responsible to the Parliament.
250
In the event of President regarded as the authority
competent to give prior sanction for the prosecution of a
Judge, counsel for the appellant contended, that the Presi-
dent cannot act independently. The President exercises his
powers by and with the advice of his Council of Ministers.
The Executive may misuse the power by interfering with the
judiciary. The Court shall avoid interpretation which is
likely to impair the independence of the judiciary. Counsel
urged that a separate Parliamentary law to deal with the
criminal misconduct of Judges of superior courts consistent
with the constitutional scheme for their removal could be
enacted and such a legislation alone would ensure judicial
independence and not the present enactment. A suggestion was
also made that since ’misbehaviour’ under clause (4) of
Article 124 of the Constitution and ’criminal misconduct’
under Section 5(1)of the Act being synonymous, the constitu-
tional process for removal of the Judge must be gone through
first and only after his removal the prosecution if need
be recommended in the same process. Otherwise, it is said
that it would lead to anomaly since there is no power either
in the Constitution or under any other enactment to suspend
the Judge or refuse to assign work to the Judge pending his
trial or conviction in the Criminal Court and the Judge can
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insist on his right to continue till his removal even after
his conviction and sentence.
It is inappropriate to state that conviction and sen-
tence are no bar for the Judge to sit in the Court. We may
make it clear that if a Judge is convicted for the offence
of criminal misconduct or any other offence involving moral
turpitude, it is but proper for him to keep himself away
from the Court. He must voluntarily withdraw from judicial
work and await the outcome of the criminal prosecution. If
he is sentenced in a criminal case he should forthwith
tender his resignation unless he obtains stay of his convic-
tion and sentence. He shall not insist on his right to sit
on the Bench till he is cleared from the charge by a Court
of competent jurisdiction. The judiciary has no power of the
purse or the sword. It survives only by public confidence
and it iS important to the stability of the society that the
confidence of the public is not shaken. The Judge whose
character is clouded and whose standards of morality
and rectitude are in doubt may not have the judicial inde-
pendence and may not command confidence of the public. He
must voluntarily withdraw from the judicial work and admin-
istration.
The emphasis on this point should not appear superflu-
ous Prof. Jackson says "Misbehaviour by a Judge, whether it
takes place on the bench or off the bench, undermines public
confidence in the administration of justice, and also dam-
ages public respect for the law of the
251
land; if nothing is seen to be done about it, the damage
goes unrepaired. This must be so when the judge commits a
serious criminal offence and remains in office". (Jackson’s
Machinery of Justice by J.R. Spencer 8th ed. p.p. 369-370)
The proved "misbehaviour" which is the basis for removal
of a Judge under clause (4) of Article 124 of the Constitu-
tion may also in certain cases involve an offence of crimi-
nal misconduct under section S(1) of the Act. But that is no
ground for withholding criminal prosecution till the Judge
is removed by Parliament as suggested by counsel for the
appellant. One is the power of Parliament and the other is
the jurisdiction of a Criminal Court. Both are mutually
exclusive. "Even a Government servant who is answerable for
his misconduct which may also constitute an offence under
the IPC or under Section 5 of the Act is liable to be prose-
cuted in addition to a departmental enquiry. If prosecuted
in a criminal court he may be punished by way of imprison-
ment or fine or with both but in departmental enquiry, the
highest penalty that could be imposed on him is dismissal.
The competent authority may either allow the prosecution to
go on in a Court of law or subject him to a departmental
enquiry or subject him to both concurrently or consecutive-
ly. It is not objectionable to initiate criminal proceedings
against public servant before exhausting the disciplinary
proceedings, and a fortiori, the prosecution of a JUdge for
criminal misconduct before his removal by Parliament for
proved misbehaviour is unobjectionable.
There are various protections afforded to Judges to
preserve the independence of the judiciary. They have pro-
tection from civil liability for any act done or ordered to
be done by them in discharge of their judicial duty whether
or not such judicial duty is performed within the limits of
their jurisdiction. That has been provided under Section 1
of the Judicial Officers Protection Act, 1850. Likewise,
Section 77 IPC gives them protection from criminal liability
for an act performed judicially. Section 77 states that
?nothing is an offence which is done by a Judge when acting
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judicially in the exercise of any power which is, or which
in good faith he believes to be, given to him by law". A
discussion on the conduct of Judges of the High Courts and
the SUpreme Court in the discharge of their duties shall not
take place in the State Legislatures or in Parliament
(Articles 12 1 and 211). The High Courts and the Supreme
Court have been constituted as Courts of record with the
power to punish anybody for committing contempt. (Articles
129 and 215). The Contempt of Courts Act, 1971 (Act 7-0-71)
provides power to the Court to take civil and criminal
contempt proceedings.
252
But we know of no law providing protection for Judges from
Criminal prosecution. Article 361(2) confers immunity from
criminal prosecution only to the President and Governors of
States and to no others. Even that immunity has been limited
during their term of office. The Judges are liable to be
dealt with just the same way as any other person in respect
of criminal offence. It is only in taking of bribes or with
regard to the offence of corruption the sanction for crimi-
nal prosecution is required.
The position in other countries seems to be not differ-
ent. In the book "Judicial Independence--The Contemporary
Debate" by S. Shetreet and J. Deschenes ’(1985 ed.) -there
is an article titled as "Who watches the Watchman" by Mauro
Cappelletti. The author has surveyed the penal liability of
judges in the legal systems of some of the countries. The
author states. In a number of national systems one can also
find the provision of criminal sanctions for certain acts or
omissions that are typical only of the administration of
Justice, such as deni de justice, or wilful abuse of the
judicial office. Even crimes which are of more general
application, such as the taking of bribes, might well be
sanctioned differently--but possibly more severely--when
they refer" to judicial officers. In other countries, howev-
er, such as Poland, Greece and Italy, a different approach
prevails. There is no criminal sanction which is specifical-
ly applicable only to judicial behaviour; rather, the judges
are included in those criminal provisions which apply gener-
ally to public servants, such as provisions concerning
corruption, omission or refusal to perform activities of
office, vexation, etc."
If we take the early English law it will be seen that
the corruption on the part of a Judge was the most reprehen-
sible crime and punishable as high treason. Even Lord Becon,
the most gifted mind of the English Renaissance, acclaimed
philosopher and the best legal brain was not spared from the
punishment for accepting bribes. He was fined forty thousand
pounds, a monumental sum, and imprisoned in the Tower during
the King’s pleasure." He was also barred forever from hold-
ing any office in the "State or Commonwealth" or from sit-
ting in Parliament, or from coming "within the verge of
the Court." King James however, liberated him from prison,
remitted his fine, and pardon him fully (The Corrupt Judge
by Joseph Borkin 1962 ed. p. 3, 4.& 17).
There is however, apprehension that the Executive being
the largest litigant is likely to misuse the power to prose-
cute the Judges.
253
That apprehension in our over-litigious society seems to be
not unjustified or unfounded. The Act no doubt provides
certain safeguards. Section 6 providing for prior sanction
from the competent authority and directing that no court
shall take cognizance of the offence under Section 5(1)
without such prior sanction is indeed a protection for
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Judges from frivolous and malicious prosecution. It is a
settled law that the authority entitled to grant sanction
must apply its mind to the facts of the case and all the
evidence collected before forming an opinion whether to
grant sanction or not. Secondly, the trial is by the Court
which is independent of the Executive. But these safeguards
may not be adequate. Any complaint against a Judge and its
investigation by the CBI, if given publicity will have a far
reaching impact on the Judge and the litigant public. The
need therefore, is a dicious use of taking action under the
Act. Care should be taken that nonest and fearless judges
are not harassed. They should be protected. In the instant
case the then Chief Justice of India was requested to give
his opinion whether the appellant could be proceeded under
the Act. It was only after the Chief Justice expressed his
views that the appellant could be proceeded under the provi-
sions of the Act, the case was registered against him. Mr.
Tulsi, learned Additional Solicitor General submitted that
he has no objection for this Court for issuing a direction
against the Government of India to follow that procedure in
every case. But Counsel for the appellant has reservations.
He maintained that it would be for the State to come forward
with u separate enactment for the Judges consistent with the
Constitutional provisions for safeguarding the independence
of the judiciary and not for this Court to improve upon the
defective law. In our opinion, there is no need for a sepa-
rate legislation for the Judges. The Act is not basically
defective in its application to judiciary. All that is
required is to lay down certain guidelines lest the Act may
be misused. This Court being the ultimate guardian of rights
of people and independence of the judiciary will not deny
itself the opportunity to lay down such guidelines. We must
never forget that this Court is not a Court of limited
jurisdiction of only dispute settling. Almost from the
beginning, this Court has been a law maker, albeit, in
Holmes’s expression. ’interstitial law maker’. Indeed, the
court’s role today is much more. It is expanding beyond
dispute settling and interstitial law making. It is a prob-
lem solver in the nebulous areas. In this case, we consider
it no were opportunity: it is a duty. It is our responsibil-
ity and duty to apply the existing law in a form more condu-
cive to the independence of the Judiciary.
The Chief Justice of India is a participatory functionary in
the
254
matter of appointment of Judges of the Supreme Court and the
High Courts. (Articles 124(2) and 2 17(1).) Even for trans-
fer of a Judge from one High Court to another the Chief
Justice should be consulted by the President of India
(Article 222). If any questionarises as to the age of a
Judge of a High Court,the question shall be decided by the
President after consultation with the Chief Justice of India
(Article 217(3)). Secondly, the Chief Justice being the head
of the judiciary is primarily concerned with the integrity
and impartiality of the judiciary. Hence it is necessary
that the Chief Justice of India is not kept out of the
picture of any criminal case contemplated against a Judge.
He would be in a better position to give his opinion in the
case and consultation with the Chief Justice of India would
be of immense assistance to the Government in coming to the
right conclusion. We therefore, direct that no criminal case
shall be registered under Section 154, Cr. P. C. against
Judge of the High Court, Chief Justice of High Court or
Judge of the Supreme Court unless the Chief Justice of India
is consulted in the matter. Due regard must be given by the
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Government to the opinion expressed by the Chief Justice. If
the Chief Justice is of opinion that it is not a fit case
for proceeding under the Act, the case shall not be regis-
tered. If the Chief Justice of India himself is the person
against whom the allegations of criminal misconduct are
received the Government shall consult any other Judge or
Judges of the Supreme Court. There shall be similar consul-
tation at the stage of examining the question of granting
sanction for prosecution and it shall be necessary and
appropriate that the question of sanction be guided by and
in accordance with the advice of the Chief Justice of India.
Accordingly the directions shall go to the Government. These
directions, in our opinion, would allay the apprehension of
all concerned that the Act is likely to be misused by the
Executive for collateral purpose.
For the reasons which we have endeavoured to outline and
subject to the directions issued, we hold that for the
purpose of clause (c) of Section 6(1) of the Act the Presi-
dent of India is the authority competent to give previous
sanction for the prosecution of a Judge of the Supreme Court
and of the High Court.
It remains only to deal with one short point in this
part of the discussion. The High Court has expressed the
view that no sanction for prosecution of the appellant under
Section 6 was necessary since he has retired from the serv-
ice on attaining the age of superannuation and was not a
public servant on the date of filing the chargesheet. The
view taken by the High Court appears to be unassailable. The
scope of Section 6 was first considered by this Court in
S.A. Venkatararnan’s
255
case, where it was observed (at 1048) that Section 6 of the
Act must be considered with reference to the words used in
the section independent of any construction which may have
been placed by the decisions on the words used in Section
197 of the Cr. P.C. The Court after analysing the terms of
Section further observed (at 1049) that "there is nothing in
the words used in Section 6(1) to even remotely suggest that
previous sanction was necessary before a court could take
cognizance of the offences mentioned therein in the case of
a person who had ceased to be a public servant at the time
the court was asked to take_ cognizance, although he had
been such a person at the time the offence was committed."
This view has been followed in C.R. Bansi v. State of Maha-
rashtra, [1971] 3 SCR 236 and also in K.S. Dharmadatan v.
Central Government & Ors., [1979] 3 SCR 832 and finally
reiterated in a Constitution Bench decision in R.S. Nayak &
Ors. v.A.R. Antulay, 1984] 2 SCC 183. The question is,
therefore, no longer res integra.
This brings us to the end of the second question and
takes us on to the first question. Among the substantive
points raised for the. appellant, the first question relates
to the nature of the offence created under clause (e) of
Section 5(1). The second, allied question, is as to the
invalidity of the charge-sheet filed in the instant case in
as such as it failed to incorporate the essential ingredient
of the offence. It was urged that the public servant is
entitled to an opportunity to explain the disproportionality
between the assets and the known sources of income. This
opportunity should be given to the public servant by the
Investigating Officer and the charge sheet must contain a
statement to that effect, that is, to the unsatisfactory way
of accounting by the public servant. Unless the charge sheet
contains such an averment, counsel contended that under law
an offence under clause (e) of Section 5(1) of the Act is
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not made out.
For a proper consideration of the contentions, we may
have the pre-natal history of clause (e) of Section 5(1).
Section 5(1) of the Act, as originally stood, provides in
the four clauses (a), (b), (c) and (d) the acts or the
omissions of which public servant is said to have committed
an offence of criminal misconduct in the discharge of his
duties. All these provisions are still there except the term
’in the discharge of his duties’. There then followed,
Section 5(3) which was in these terms:
" In any trial of an offence pun-
ishable under sub-section (2) the fact that
the accused person or any other person on his
behalf is in possession, for which the accused
person cannot satisfactorily account, of
pecuniary resources or property
256
disproportionate to his known sources of
income may be proved, and on such proof the
court shall presume, unless the contrary is
proved, that the accused person is guilty of
criminal misconduct in the discharge of his
official duty and his conviction therefor
shall not be invalid by reason only that it is
based solely on such presumption." ’
This Section 5(3) does not create a new offence but only
provides an additional mode of proving an offence punishable
under Section 5(2) for which any accused person was being
tried. It enables the Court to raise a presumption of guilt
of the accused in certain circumstances. This additional
mode is by proving the extent of the pecuniary resources or
property in the possession of the accused or any other
person on his behalf and thereafter showing that this is
disproportionate to his known sources of income. If these
facts are proved the section makes it obligatory for the
Court to presume that the accused person is guilty of crimi-
nal misconduct in the discharge of his official duty, unless
the contrary is proved by the accused that he is not so
guilty. The Section 5(3) further provides that the convic-
tion for an offence of criminal misconduct shall not be
invalid by reason that it is based solely on such presump-
tion. (See: (i) C.S.D. Swamy v. The State, [1960] 1 SCR 461;
(ii) Surajpal Singh v. The State of U.P., [961] 2 SCR 97 1,
and (iii) Sajjan Singh v. The State of Punjab, [1964] 4 SCR
630.
In 1962, as earlier explained, Santhanam Committee on
’Prevention of Corruption’ was constituted to review, among
other things, the law relating to corruption, to ensure
speedy trial of cases of bribery and criminal misconduct and
to make the law otherwise more effective. The Committee in
its report has, inter alia recommended the inclusion of
clause (e) of Section 5(1) as a substantive offence in the
Act. The Government accepted that recommendation and to give
effect to that recommendation, enacted clause (e) of Section
5(1) replacing Section 5(3) of the Act. The Statement of
Objects and Reasons accompanying the Bill leading to the
enactment of ’The AntiCorruption Laws (Amendment) Act, 1964
(Act No. 40 of 1964) by which clause (e) of Section 5(1) was
introduced into the Act reads:
The Committee has recommended a
number of important amendments to the Preven-
tion of Corruption Act, 1947. It has suggested
that the presumption enunciated in sub-section
(1) and (2) of Section 4 of the Act should be
made available also in respect of offences
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under
257
Section 5 and possession of disproportionate
assets should be made a substantive offence."
(Emphasis supplied)
For immediate reference, clause (e) of Section 5(1) is
reproduced hereunder:
" 5(1)(e) if he or any person on his behalf is
in possession or has, at any time during the
period of his office, been in possession, for
which the public servant cannot satisfactorily
account, of pecuniary resources or property
disproportionate to his known sources of
income".
The terms of clause (e) indicates that the principle
underlying section 5(3) appears to have been elevated to a
substantive offence in somewhat different words. We will
presently analyse the ingredients of the offence under
clause (e), but before that, two decisions of this Court on
the scope of clause (e) may be referred. In Maharashtra v.
K.K.S. Ramaswamy, [1978] 1 SCR 274, Shinghal, J., said (at
276) that the result of the enactment of clause (e) is that
mere possession of pecuniary resources or property dispro-
portionate to the known sources of income of a public serv-
ant, for which he could not satisfactorily account, became
an offence by itself although Section 5(3) which existed
prior to Section 5(1)(e) did not constitute an offence.
In State of Maharashtra v. Wasudeo Ramachandra Kaidal-
war, [1981] 3 SCR 675, Sen, J., spelled out succintly the
insight of clause (e) of Section 5(1) (at pp. 682 to 684):
"The terms and expressions appearing in s.
5(1)(e) of the Act are the same as those used
in the old section 5(3). Although the two
provisions operate in two different fields,
the meaning to be assigned to them must be the
same. The expression "known sources of income"
means "sources known to the prosecution". So
also the same meaning must be given to the
words "for which the public servant is unable
to satisfactorily account" occurring in s.
5(1)(e). No doubt s. 4(1) provides for pre-
sumption of guilt in cases falling under ss.
5(1)(a) and (b), but there was, in our opin-
ion, no need to mention s. 5(1)(a) therein.
For the reason is obvious. The provision
contained in s. 5(1)(e) of the Act is a self-
contained provision. The first part of the
Section casts a burden on the prosecution and
the second
258
on the accused. When s. 5(1)(e) uses the words
"for which the public servant is unable to
satisfactorily account", it is implied that
the burden is on such public servant to ac-
count for the sources for the acquisition of
disproportionate assets. The High Court,
therefore, was in error in holding that a
public servant charged for having dispropor-
tionate assets in the possession for which he
cannot satisfactorily account, cannot be
convicted of an offence under s. 5(2) read
with s. 5(1)(e) of the Act unless the prosecu-
tion disproves all possible sources of
income."
On the burden of proof under Section 5(1)(e) of the Act,
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learned Judge said:
"The expression "burden of proof" has two
distinct meanings; (1) the legal burden i.e.
the burden of establishing the guilt, and (2)
the evidentia1 burden, i.e. the burden of
leading evidence. In a criminal trial, the
burden of proving everything essential to
establish the charge against the accused lies
upon the prosecution, and that burden never
shifts. Not,/withstanding the general rule
that the burden of proof lies exclusively upon
the prosecution, in the case of certain c
fences, the burden of proving a particular
fact in issue may be laid by law upon the
accused. The burden resting on the accused in
such cases is, however, not so onerous as that
which lies on the prosecution and is dis-
charged by proof of a balance of probabili-
ties."
As to the ingredients of the offence, learned Judge contin-
ued:
"The ingredients of the offence of criminal
misconduct under s. 5(2) read with s. 5(1)(e)
are the possession of pecuniary resources or
property disproportionate to the known sources
of income for which the public servant cannot
satisfactorily account. To substantiate the
charge, the prosecution must prove the follow-
ing facts before it can bring a case under s.
5(1)(e), namely, (1)it must establish that the
accused is a public servant, (2) the nature
and extend of the pecuniary resources or
property which were found in his possession,
(3) it must be proved as to what were his
known sources of income i.e. known to the,
prosecution, and (4) it must prove quite
objectively, that such resources or property
found in possession of the accused
259
were disproportionate to his known sources of
income. Once these four ingredients are estab-
lished, the offence of criminal misconduct
under s. 5(1)(e) is complete, unless the
accused is able to account for such resources
or proper" The burden then shifts to the
accused to satisfaction. account for his
possession of disproportionate assets. The
extent and nature of burden of proof resting
upon the public servant to be found in posses-
sion of disproportionate assets under s.
5(1)(c) cannot be higher than the test laid by
the Court in Jahgan’s case (supra), i.e. to
establish his case by a preponderance of
probability. That test was laid down by the
Court following the dictum of Viscount Sankey,
L.C. in Woolmington v. Director of Public
prosecutions."
The soundness of the reasoning in Wasudeo Ramachandra
Kaidalwar case (supra) has been doubted. Counsel for the
appellant urged that the view taken on Section 5(3) cannot
be imported to clause (e) of Section 5(1) and the decision,
therefore, requires reconsideration. But we do not think
that the decision requires reconsideration. It is signifi-
cant to note that there is useful parallel found in Section
5(3) and clause (e) of Section 5(1). Clause (e) creates a
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statutory offence which must be proved by the prosecution.
It is for the prosecution to prove that the accused or any
person on his behalf, has been in possession of pecuniary
resources or property disproportionate to his known sources
of income. When that onus is discharged by the prosecution,
it is for the accused to account satisfactorily for the
disproportionality of the properties possessed by him. The
Section makes available statutory defence which must be
proved by the accused. It is a restricted defence that is
accorded to the accused to account for the disproportionali-
ty of the assets over the income. But the legal burden of
proof placed on the accused is not so onerous as that of the
prosecution. However, it is just not throwing some doubt on
the prosecution version. The Legislature has advisedly used
the expression "satisfactorily account". The emphasis must
be on the word "satisfactorily". That means the accused has
to satisfy the court that his explanation is worthy of
acceptance. The burden of proof placed on the accused is an
evidential burden though not a pursuasive burden. The ac-
cused however, could discharge that burden of proof "on the
balance of probabilities" either from the evidence of the
prosecution and/or evidence from the defence.
This procedure may be contrary to the well known principle
of
260
criminal jurisprudence laid down in Woolmington v. Director
of Public Prosecution, [1935] A.C. 462 that the burden-of
proof is always on the prosecution and never shifts to the
accused person. But Parliament is competent to place the
burden on certain aspects on the accused as well and partic-
ularly in matters "specially within his knowledge". (Section
106 of the Evidence Act). Adroitly, as observed in Swamy
case (at 469) and reiterated in Wasudeo case (at 683), the
prosecution cannot, in the very nature of things, be expect-
ed to know the affairs of a public servant found in posses-
sion of resources of property disproportionate to his known
sources of income. It is for him to explain. Such a statute
placing burden on the accused cannot be regarded as unrea-
sonable, unjust or unfair. Nor it can be regarded as con-
trary to Article 21 of the Constitution as contended for the
appellant. It may be noted that the principle re-affirmed in
Woolmington case is not a universal rule to be followed in
every case. The principle is applied in the absence of
statutory provision to the contrary. (See the observations
of Lord Templeman and Lord Griffiths in Rig. v. Hunt, [1986]
3 WLR 1115 at 1118 and 1129).
Counsel for the appellant however, submitted that there
is no law prohibiting a public servant having in his posses-
sion assets disproportionate to his known sources of income
and such possession becomes an offence of criminal miscon-
duct only when the accused is unable to account for it.
Counsel seems to be focussing too much only on one part of
clause (e) of Section 5(1). The first part of clause (e) of
Section 5(1) as seen earlier relates to the proof of assets
possessed by the public servant. When the prosecution proves
that the public servant possesses assets disproportionate to
his known sources of income the offence of criminal miscon-
duct is attributed to the public servant. However, it is
open to the public servant to satisfactorily account for
such disproportionality of assets. But that is not the same
thing to state that there is no offence till the public
servant is able to account for the excess of assets. If one
possesses assets beyond his legitimate means, it goes with-
out saying that the excess is out of illgotten gain. The
assets are not drawn like nitrogen from the air. It has to
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be acquired for which means are necessary. It is for the
public servant to prove the source of income or the means by
which he acquired the assets. That is the substance of
clause (e) of Section 5(1).
In the view that we have taken as to the nature of the
offence created under clause (e), it may not be necessary to
examine the contention relating to ingredient of the of-
fence. But since the legality of the charge sheet has been
impeached, we will deal with that contention
261
also. Counsel laid great emphasis on the expression "for
which he account satisfactorily account" used in clause (e)
of Section 5(1) of the Act. He argued that that term means
that the public servant is entitled to an opportunity before
the Investigating Officer to explain the alleged dispropor-
tionality between assets and the known sources of income.
The Investigating Officer is required to consider his expla-
nation and the charge sheet filed by him must contain such
averment. The failure to mention that requirement would
vitiate the charge sheet and renders it invalid. This sub-
mission, if we may say so, completely overlooks the powers
of the Investigating Officer. The Investigating Officer is
only required to collect material to find out whether the
offence alleged appears to have been committed. In the
course of the investigation, he may examine the accused. He
may seek his clarification and if necessary he may cross
check with him about his known sources of income and assets
possessed by him. Indeed, fair investigation requires as
rightly stated by Mr. A.D. Giri learned Solicitor General,
that the accused should not be kept in darkness. He should
be taken into confidence if he is willing to cooperate. But
to state that after collection of all material the investi-
gating Officer must give an opportunity to the accused and
call upon idm to account for the excess of the assets over
the known sources of income and then decide whether the
accounting is satisfactory or not, would be elevating the
Investigating Officer to the position of an enquiry officer
or a judge. The investigating officer is not holding an
enquiry against the conduct of the public servant or deter-
mining the disputed issues regarding the disproportionality
between the assets and the income of the accused. He just
collects material from all sides and prepares a report which
he files in the Court as charge sheet.
The charge sheet is nothing but a final report of police
officer under Section 173(2) of the Cr. P.C. The Section
173(2) provides that on completion of the investigation the
police officer investigating into a cognizable offence shall
submit a report. The report must be in the form prescribed
by the State Government and stating therein (a) the names of
the parties; (b) the nature of the information; (c) the
names of the persons who appear to be acquainted with the
circumstances of the case; (d) whether any offence appears
to have been committed and, if so, by whom (e) whether the
accused has been arrested; (f) whether he had been released
on his bond and, if so, whether with or without sureties;
and (g) whether he has been. forwarded in custody under Sec.
170. As observed by this Court in Satya Narain Musadi and
Ors. v. State of Bihar, [1980] 3 SCC 152 at 157; that the
statutory requirement of the report under Section 173(2)
would be complied
262
with if the various details prescribed therein are included
in the report. This report is an intimation to the magis-
trate that upon investigation into a cognizable offence the
investigating officer has been able to procure sufficient
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evidence for the Court to inquire into the offence and the
necessary information is being sent to the Court. In fact,
the report under Section 173(2) purports to be an opinion of
the investigating officer that as far as he is concerned he
has been able to procure sufficient material for the trial
of the accused by the Court. The report is complete if it is
accompanied with all the documents and statements of wit-
nesses as required by Section 175(5). Nothing more need be
stated in the report’of the Investigating Officer. It is
also not necessary that all the details of the offence must
be stated. The details of the offence are required to be
proved to bring home the guilt to the accused at a later
stage i.e. in the course of the trial of the case "adducing
acceptable evidence.
In the instant case, the charge sheet contains all the
requirements of Section 173(2). It states that the investi-
gation shows that between 1 May 1969 and 24 February 1976
the appellant as the Chief Justice of the High Court of
Madras was in possession of the pecuniary resources and
property in his own name and in the name of his wife and two
sons etc., which were disproportionate by Rs.6,41,416.36 to
the known sources of income over the same period and cannot
satisfactorily account for such disproportionate pecuniary
resources and property. The details of properties and pecu-
niary resources of the appellant also have been set out in
clear terms. No. more, in our opinion, is required to be
stated in the charge sheet. It is fully in accordance with
the terms of Section 173(2) Cr. P.C. and clause (e) of
Section 5(1) of the Act.
For the foregoing reasons, we dismiss the appeal and
direct the trial court to proceed with the case expeditious-
ly.
Before parting with the case, we may say a word more.
This case has given us much concern. We gave our fullest
consideration to the questions raised. We have examined and
re-examined the questions before reaching the conclusion. We
consider that the society’s demand for honesty in a judge is
exacting and absolute. The standards of judicial behaviour,
both on and off the Bench, are normally extremely high. For
a Judge to deviate from such standards of honesty and impar-
tiality is to betray the trust reposed on him. No excuse or
no legal relativity can condone such betrayal. From the
standpoint of justice the size of the bribe or scope of
corruption cannot be the scale for measuring a judge’s
dishonour. A single dishonest judge not only dis-
263
honours himself and disgraces his office but jeopardizes the
integrity of the entire judicial system.
A judicial scandal has always been regarded as far more
deplorable than a scandal involving either the Executive or
a member of the Legislature. The slightest hint of irregu-
larity or impropriety in the Court is a cause for great
anxiety and alarm. "A legislator or an administrator may be
found guilty of corruption without apparently endangering
the foundation of the State. But a Judge must keep himself
absolutely above suspicion" to preserve the impartiality and
independence of the judiciary. and to have the public confi-
dence thereof.
SHARMA, J. I have gone through the learned judgments of
Mr. Justice Ray, Mr. Justice Shetty and Mr. Justice Verma. I
agree with Mr. Justice Ray and Mr. Justice Shetty that the
appeal should be dismissed. In view of the elaborate discus-
sion of the facts and law in the judgments of my learned
brothers, I am refraining from dealing with them in detail,
and am indicating my reasons briefly.
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2. The expression "public servant" used in the Preven-
tion of Corruption Act, 1947 (hereinafter referred to as the
’Act’) is undoubtedly wide enough to denote every judge,
including Judges of the High Court and the Supreme Court.
The argument is that in view of the language of the Act
considered along with the provisions of the Constitution
especially Article 124, Section 5 of the Act must be held to
be inapplicable to the High Court and Supreme Court Judges.
It has not, however, been suggested, and rightly, that the
Parliament lacks jurisdiction in passing a law for trial and
conviction of High Court and Supreme Court Judges in cases
where they are guilty of committing criminal offences. The
contention is that in view of the scheme of the Act it
should be inferred that the penal provisions of the Act do
not apply to them. Great reliance has been placed on Section
6, requiring previous sanction of the authority competent to
remove the Judge’ from the office as a necessary condition
for taking cognizance. It has been urged that in view of
this essential requirement it has to be held that the Act
does not cover the case of a member of the higher judiciary
while in office and consequently it cannot be made applica-
ble to him even after his retirement. For the purpose of
this argument it is presumed that there is no authority
competent to remove a High Court Judge from his office
within the meaning of Section 6, and the condition precedent
for starting a prosecution against him, therefore, cannot be
satisfied. I do not think this basic assumption is correct.
264
3. Section 6(1)(c) of the Act speaks of the "authority
competent to remove him from his office". The question is as
to whether there is some "authority competent" to remove a
High Court Judge from his office or not. An answer in the
negative will be inconsistent with Article 124 Clauses 4 and
5 read with Article 2 18 of the Constitution. It is signifi-
cant to note that Article 124(4) speaks of "removal from his
office", and Section 6 of the Act uses similar language. The
removal of a Judge does not take .place automatically on
commission or omission of a particular act or acts or on
fulfilment of certain prescribed conditions. It is dependant
on certain steps to be taken as mentioned)in the Article
through human agency. Initially some members 9f the Parlia-
ment have to move in the matter and finally an order has to
be passed by the President. Thus although more than one
person are involved in the process, it is not permissible to
say that no authority exists for the purpose of exercising
the power to remove a High Court Judge from his office. As
to who is precisely the authority in this regard is a matter
which, in my view, does not arise in the present case, but
the vital question whether such an authority exists at all
must be answered in the affirmative.
4. It has been strenuously contended by Mr. Sibal,
learned counsel for the appellant, that the Constitution
envisages an independent judiciary, and to achieve this goal
it is essential that the other limbs of the State including
the executive and the lagislature should be denied a posi-
tion from where the judiciary can be pressurized.
5. The State is an organisation committed to public
good; it is not an end in itself. Its different branches
including the legislature, judiciary and the executive are
intended to perform different assigned important functions.
Judiciary has a duty to dispense justice between person and
person as also between person and State itself. To be able
to perform its duties effectively the Judges have to act
"without fear or favour, affection or ill will". They must,
therefore, be free from pressure from any quarter. Nobody
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can deny this basic essence of independence of judiciary.
But for the judiciary to be really effective, the purity in
the administration of justice and the confidence of the
people in the courts are equally essential. It is to achieve
this end that the higher judiciary has been vested with the
power to punish for its own contempt. This has become neces-
sary so that an aggrieved or misdirected person may not cast
aspersions on the court which may adversely affect the
public confidence. If the community loses its faith in the
courts, their very existence will cease to have any meaning.
A person with a just cause shall not approach the court for
a legal
265
remedy, if according to his belief the decision of the court
would be given on extreneous consideration and not on the
merits of his claim. People will return to the law of the
jungle for settling their dispute on the streets. These
aspects are common for the entire judiciary, whether Higher
or Subordinate, and to my mind no classification is permis-
sible separating one category from another.
6. Although the Judges of the higher judiciary perform
important functions and are vested with special jurisdic-
tion, at cannot be forgotten that judicial power, wherever
it is vested, is integral and basic for a democratic consti-
tution. A large number of cases are finally decided at the
stage of the subordinate judiciary. The subordinate judici-
ary, therefore, also needs the same independence which is
essential for the higher judiciary. It is, therefore, not
safe to assume that the Act intended to make in its applica-
tion any discrimination between the lower and the higher
judiciary. Protection to the public servant in general is
provided under Article 311 and the interest of the subordi-
nate judiciary is further taken care of by the High Court,
and this along with the provisions regarding previous sanc-
tion shields them from unjustified prosecution. Similarly
protection is available to the High Court and Supreme Court
Judges through the provisions of Article 124(4) and (5) of
the Constitution. So far this aspect is concerned, the two
categories of Judges--High Court and Supreme Court Judges on
the one hand and the rest on the other have not been treated
by the law differently. There cannot be any rational ground
on the basis of which a member of a higher judiciary may be
allowed to escape prosecution while in identical circum-
stances a member of the subordinate judiciary is tried and
convicted. Such an interpretation of the Act will militate
against its constitutional validity and should not, there-
fore, be preferred.
7. There is still another reason indicating that the
interpretation suggested on behalf of the appellant should
not be accepted. If it is held that a member of the higher
judiciary is not liable to prosecution for an offence under
Section 5 on account of the requirement of previous sanction
under Section 6, it will follow that he will be immune from’
the prosecution not only under Section 5(1)(e) as is the
present case, but also for the other offences under Clauses
(a) to (d). So far offences punishable under Sections 161,
164 and 165 of the Indian Penal Code are concerned they are
also subject to such-previous sanction. The result will be
serious. It is a well established principle that no person
is above the law and even a constitutional amendment as
contained in Article 329 A in the case of the Prime Minister
was struck
266
down in 1976 (2) SCR 347 at 470 C-D. It has to be remembered
that in a proceeding under Article 124 a Judge can merely be
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removed from his office. He cannot be convicted and pun-
ished. Let us take a case where there is a positive finding
recorded in such a proceeding that the Judge was habitually
accepting bribe, and on that ground he is removed from his
office. On the argument of Mr. Sibal, the matter will have
to be closed with his removal and he will escape the crimi-
nal liability and even the ill gotten money would not be
confiscated. Let us consider another situation where an
abetter is found guilty under Section 165 A of the Indian
Penal Code and is convicted. The main -culprit, the Judge
shall escape on the argument of the appellant. In a civi-
lised society the law cannot be assumed to be leading to
such disturbing results.
8. In adopting the other view I do not see any difficul-
ty created either by the scheme or the language of the Act
or by any constitutional provision. The statement in Santha-
nam Committee’s report that the members did not consider
judiciary to be included in the terms of the reference, is
not of much help as admittedly the Act applies to the mem-
bers of the subordinate judiciary. Nor can the rules relat-
ing to disclosure by some Govt. servants of their assets and
liabilities determine the scope of the law. These rules
differ from place to place and are amended from time to time
according to the changing exigencies. As has been stated
earlier, the power to remove a High Court Judge from his
office does exist and has to be exercised in appropriate
circumstances according to the provisions of Article 124. It
is, therefore, not right to say that previous sanction for
his prosecution cannot be made available. Section 2 of the
Act adopts the definition of "public servant" as given in
Section 21 of the Indian Penal Code, which includes "Every
Judge". If the legislature had intended to exclude the High
Court and Supreme Court Judges from the field of Section 5
of the Act, it could have said so in unambiguous terms
instead of adopting the wide meaning of the expression
"public servant" as given in the Indian Penal Code.
9. The further question as to the identity of the
authority empowered to grant the necessary sanction as
mentioned in Section 6 of the Act was hotly debated during
the hearing of the case. Mr. Justice Shetty has held that
since ultimately it is the order of the President which is
necessary for the removal of a Judge, he must be treated to
be the competent authority. Taking into consideration the
independence of judiciary as envisaged by the Constitution,
it has further been observed that the Chief Justice of India
will have to be
267
consulted in the matter and steps would have to be taken in
accordance with his advice. Mr. Justice Ray and Mr. Justice
Venkatchaliah are in agreement with this view. These obser-
vations, I believe, would be not only acceptable, but wel-
come to the Union of India, as during the hearing it was at
the suggestion of the learned Solicitor General and the
Additional Solicitor General, that the desirability of the
aforesaid direction in the judgment was considered by the
Bench. I also fully appreciate that if the executive follows
this rule strictly, a further protection from harassment of
the judges by uncalled for and unjustified criminal prosecu-
tion shall be available. But in my view such a binding
direction cannot be issued by this Court on the basis of the
provisions of the Constitution and the Act.
10. Before proceeding further 1 would again state that
having answered the question as to whether a Judge of the
superior court can be removed by some authority whoever he
or they may be, in the affirmative, it is not necessary to
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decide the further controversy as mentioned above. I would,
therefore, be content merely by indicating some of the
aspects which may be relevant for the issue, to be decided
later in a case when it directly arises.
11. If the President is held to be the appropriate
authority to grant the sanction without reference to the
Parliament, he will be bound by the advice, he receives from
the Council of Ministers. This will seriously jeopardise the
independence of judiciary which is undoubtedly a basic
feature of the Constitution. Realising the serious implica-
tion it was suggested on behalf of the Union of India that
this Court may lay down suitable conditions by way of prior
approval of the Chief Justice of India for launching a
prosecution. I fully appreciate the concern of all of us
including the Union of India for arriving at a satisfactory
solution of the different problems which are arising, but if
we start supplementing the law as it stands now, we will be
encroaching upon the legislative field. To meet this objec-
tion it was contended that it is permissible for us to issue
the suggested direction because the Chief Justice of India
is not a stranger in the matter of appointment of a Judge of
the High Court or the Supreme Court; rather he is very much
in the picture. Reference was made to the provisions of
Articles 124-(2) and 2 17(1). The difficulty in accepting
this argument is that the Governor of the State and the
Chief Justice of the High Court are as much involved in the
matter of appointment of a Judge of the High Court as the
Chief Justice of India. We cannot, therefore, simplify the
problem by referring to the aforesaid Articles. In my view
the approval of Chief Justice of India can be introduced
268
as a condition for prosecution only by the Parliament and
not by this Court.
12. The question, then, is as to what is the protection
available under the law as it exists today, to the independ-
ence of the judiciary of the country. The answer is in
Section 6 of the Act, which by providing for previous sanc-
tion of the authority empowered to remove the Judge, takes
us to Article 124, Clauses (4) and (5). Since the Constitu-
tion itself has considered it adequate in the matter of
dealing with serious accusations against the Judges by
incorporating the provisions of Clauses (4) and (5) in
Article 124, they must be treated to be appropriate and
suitable; and should be resorted to in the matter of prose-
cution also, in view of the Parliament enacting Section 6 of
the Act in the language which attracts the constitutional
provisions.
13. It has been argued that in view of the constitution-
al prohibition against any discussion in Parliament with
respect to the conduct of a Judge of the superior court,
except in connection with his removal under Article 124, it
will not be possible to obtain the necessary sanction as
mentioned in Section 6 of the Act, except by initiating a
motion for removal also simultaneously; and then, it will be
a time consuming process. I will assume the contention to be
correct, but for that reason I do not think that the correct
interpretation of the legal position can be discorrected, as
it does not lead to any illegal consequence, untenable
position or an absurd result. It is true that the grant of
sanction will be delayed until the accusation is examined
according to the law enacted under Clause (5) of Article
124, but once that stage is over and a finding is recorded
against the Judge, there should not be any hitch in combin-
ing the two matters--that is the removal and the grant of
sanction--which are obviously intertwined. It has to
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be remembered that the prosecution under Section 5(1) of the
Act refers to collection by the Judge of disproportionately
large amount of wealth during the period he has been in
office. The two matters--the prosecution and removal--should
not, therefore, be treated to be separate and unconnected
with each other. Otherwise, there will be scope left for the
Judge concerned to claim that although he may be facing
prosecution or may have been even convicted after trial, he
still continues to be a Judge entitled to exercise his
powers, as he has not been removed from his office. It was
stated during the course of the hearing that actually such a
situation has arisen in another country where a Judge al-
though punished with imprisonment was insisting that he
still continued in his office. I do not think that such a
thing is permissible in this country. The anomaly involved
in such situations
269
can be satisfactorily resolved by combining the two matters
and getting clearance from the Parliament. Before closing
this chapter I would again repeat that this issue is not
arising in the present case and will have to be considered
and finally decided only when it directly arises. Since,
however, opinions have been expressed. which I regret I do
not find myself in a position to share. I have, with great-
est respect of my learned brothers, taken the liberty to
state some important considerations, which appear to be
relevant to me.
14. Mr. Sibal next contended that as the appellant was
not called upon to account for the property which was found
in his possession, one of the essential ingredients under
Section 5(1)(e) is not satisfied. There is no merit whatso-
ever in this point either. The section does not contemplate
a notice to be served on the accused. If the prosecuting at
hority after making a suitable enquiry, by taking into
account the relevant documents and questioning relevant
persons, forms the opinion that the accused cannot satisfac-
torily account the accumulation of disproportionate wealth
in his possession the section is attracted. The records
clearly indicate that after duly taking all the appropriate
steps it was stated that the assets found in the possession
of the appellant in his own name and in the name of his wife
and two sons, were disproportionate by a sum of over Rs.6
lacs to his known sources of income during the relevant
period and which he "cannot satisfactorily account".
15. Since I do not find any merit in any of the points
urged on behalf of the appellant this appeal is dismissed.
VERMA, J. I have perused the opinions of my learned
brethren constituting the majority taking the view that the
Prevention of Corruption Act applies. I am unable to sub-
scribe to this view. My dissenting opinion is at best only
academic. All the same I deem it fit to record the same with
my reasons for taking a different view. It is indeed unfor-
tunate that this question should at all arise for judicial
determination. However, the question having arisen we are
bound to give our opinion. In view of the significance of
the point, I record my respectful dissent reassured by the
observations of Hughes that ’unanimity which is merely
formal, which is recorded at the expense of strong, con-
flicting views, is not desirable in a court of last resort,
whatever may be the effect on public opinion at the time.
This is so because what must ultimately sustain the court in
public confidence is the character and independence of the
judges ...... It is better that their independence should
be maintained and recognised than that
270
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unanimity should be secured through its sacrifice. I would
rather b.e a conscientious lone dissenter than a troubled
conformist. It is in this spirit, in all humility, I record
my dissent.
Can the Chief Justice of a High Court or any of its
puisne Judges be prosecuted for an offence punishable under
the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947 (hereinafter referred
to as ’the Act’)? This is the main question arising for
decision in this appeal. The appellant, K. Veeraswami, a
former Chief Justice of the Madras High Court filed an
application under Section 482 of the Code of Criminal Proce-
dure, 1973 (Criminal M.P. No. 265 of 1978) to quash the
proceedings in C.C. No. 46 of 1977 in the Court of the
Special Judge, Madras, initiated on a charge-sheet accusing
him of the offence of criminal misconduct under Section
5(1)(e) punishable under Section 5(2) of the Act, as amended
by the Amendment Act of 1964. The matter was heard by a full
bench of the High Court which dismissed the application by
order dated 27.4. 1979 according to the majority opinion of
Natarajan and Mohan, JJ. while Balasubrahmanyan, J. dissent-
ed. This appeal is by a certificate granted by the High
Court under Articles 132(1) and 134(1)(c) of the Constitu-
tion of India in view of the important question of law
involved for decision.
The material facts are only a few. The appellant joined
the Bar of Madras in the year 1941 and had a lucrative prac-
tice. In 1953 he was appointed as Assistant Government
Pleader and in 1959, the Government Pleader at Madras. On
20.2.1960, he was elevated to the Bench of the Madras High
Court being appointed as a permanent Judge of that Court. On
1.5. 1969, he was appointed the Chief Justice of the Madras
High Court, from which office he retired on 7.4.1976. On
24.2. 1976, the Central Bureau of Investigation at Delhi
registered a case against the appellant under the Act and on
28.2.1976, the First Information Report was lodged accusing
the appellannt of the offence of criminal misconduct under
Section 5(1)(e) punishable under Section 5(2) of the Act. A
charge-sheet dated 15.12.1977 was filed alleging that be-
tween 1.5. 1969. and 24.2. 1976, while the appellant was a
public servant, he was in possession of pecuniary resources
and property in his own name and in the names of his wife
Smt. Eluthai Ammal and his two sons S/Shri V. Suresh and V.
Bhaskar, which were disproportionate to the extent of
Rs.6,41,416.36p. to his known sources of income during that
period and that he cannot satisfactorily account for such
disproportionate pecuniary resources and property. The
charge sheet also gave particulars on the basis of which the
disproportion in assets was alleged.
271
The appellant filed a petition under Section 482 Cr.
P.C. in the High Court for quashing the prosecution pending
in the Court of Special Judge, Madras, on the above charge-
sheet, with the result indicated above. Several arguments
including the allegation of mala fides against the Central
Government were advanced in the High Court on behalf of the
appellant. It is, however, unnecessary to refer to all of
them since at the hearing of the appeal before us, the
appellant’s case was confined only to the grounds stated
hereafter and the ground of mala fides alleged in the High
Court was expressly given up at the hearing before us by
Shri Kapil Sibal, learned counsel for the appellant.
Shri Kapil Sibal, learned counsel for the appellant
advanced two arguments only. His first contention is that
the Judges of the High Courts and the Supreme Court are not
within the purview of the Act, which is a special enactment
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applicable to public servants, in whose case prosecution can
be launched after sanction granted under Section 6 of the
Act, which is alien to the scheme envisaged for constitu-
tional functionaries like Judges of the High Courts and
Supreme Court. He argued that the special provisions in the
Constitution of India relating to the Judges of the High
Courts and the Supreme Court clearly indicate that they are
not within the purview of the Act and that after their
appointment in the manner prescribed, they are wholly immune
from executive influence, their tenure being fixed by the
Constitution, except for removal in the manner prescribed by
Article 124(4). The other argument of Shri Sibal is that one
of the essential ingredients of the offence of criminal
misconduct, defined in Section 5(1)(e) of the Act, which is
punishable under Section 5(2) thereof, is the inability of
the accused to satisfactorily account for possession of
disproportionate assets, which must be evident from the
documents annexed to the charge-sheet to enable the Special
Judge to take cognizance of the offence and this can be
possible only if the accused is asked to give his account
before filing of the charge-sheet. On this basis, it was
argued that the procedure for grant of sanction under Sec-
tion 6 of the Act which requires the sanctioning authority
to see the explanation of the public servant before granting
sanction, makes it feasible, which also shows its inapplica-
bility to the superior Judges, in whose case there is no
such service record or machinery provided. In a way, the
second argument of Shri Sibal also is connected with his
first argument. Shri Sibal argued that irrespective of the
desirability of enacting a law providing for the prosecution
and trial of superior Judges accused of the offence of
criminal misconduct, the existing law contained in the Act
is inapplicable to them. In reply, the learned Solicitor
General,
272
who was followed by the learned Additional Solicitor Gener-
al, strenuously urged that the Judges of the High Courts and
the Supreme Court also fall within the purview of the Act
being ’public servants’, which definition is wide enough to
include ’every Judge’. They argued that there is no immunity
to the superior Judges as in the case of the President and
the Governor under Article 36 1 of the Constitution and,
therefore, there was no reason to exclude to superior Judges
from the purview of the Act. The difficulty of sanction
under Section 6 for the prosecution of superior Judges and
the special provisions contained in clauses (4) and (5) of
Article 124 read with Article 2 18, it was suggested, pre-
sented no difficulty since the President of India could be
treated as the competent authority to grant sanction in
accordance. with Section 6(1)(c) of the Act in the case of
the High Court and Supreme Court Judges. The learned Solici-
tor General and the Additional Solicitor General also urged
that adequate safeguards in the form of guidelines be sug-
gested by this Court to prevent any abuse of executive
authority or harassment to independent Judges. It was sug-
gested that some machinery involving the Chief Justice of
India for grant of sanction for prosecution by the President
of India, even for investigation into the offence, could be
suggested by this Court for implicit compliance by the
executive. It was argued that in this manner preservation of
independence of the judiciary could be ensured while treat-
ing the superior Judges also within the purview of the Act
to enable the prosecution and punishment of the corrupt
ones.
In view of the great significance of the point involved
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for decision which has arisen for the first time, the matter
was heard at considerable length to illuminate the grey
areas. At the hearing the consensus was that, this unfortu-
nate controversy not envisaged earlier, having now arisen,
may be, it is time that a clear provision be made within the
constitutional scheme to provide for a machinery to deal
with the corrupt members of the superior judiciary, which
itself is necessary for preservation of the independence of
the judiciary. However, the difference is with regard to the
adequacy of machinery enacted in the existing legislation
for this purpose. In other words, the difference is about
the law as it is and not about what it should be. For the
purpose of deciding this case, we have to see the law as it
now exists.
The main point for consideration is whether the Chief
Justices and puisne Judges of the High Courts are within the
purview of the Act. It is implicit that if the answer is in
the affirmative, then the Chief Justice and Judges of the
Supreme Court also would fall within the purview of the Act
and so also the Comptroller and Auditor Genera-
273
and the Chief Election Commissioner, whose terms and condi-
tions of office are the same as those of a Judge of the
Supreme Court of India. If for any reason the Comptroller
and Auditor General and the Chief Election Commissioner be
considered outside the purview of the Act, that would itself
indicate exclusion of certain similar constitutional func-
tionaries from the purview of the Act. The real question,
therefore, is: Whether these constitutional functionaries
were intended to be included in the definition of ’public
servant’, as defined in the Act, and the existing enacted
law is to that effect. The desirability of enacting such a
law applicable to them, it was strenuously urged at the
hearing, would be a matter primarily for the Parliament to
consider in case the existing law as enacted does not apply
to them. There is no material to indicate that corruption in
judiciary was a mischief to be cured when the Prevention of
Corruption Act was enacted. For this reason, the desirabil-
ity now expressed of having such a law cannot be an aid to
construction of the existing law to widen its ambit and
bring these constitutional functionaries within it since
such an exercise would be wholly impermissible in the garb
of judicial craftmanship which cannot replace legislation in
a vergin field. Judicial activism can supply the deficien-
cies and fill gaps in an already existing structure found
deficient in some ways, but it must stop sort of building a
new edifice where there is none. In a case like the present,
the only answer can be a definite ’yes’ or definite ’no’,
but not ’yes’ with the addition of the legislative require-
ments in the enactment which are wholly absent and without
which the answer cannot be ’yes’. In my considered view
laying down guidelines to be implicitly obeyed, if they find
no place in the existing enactment and to bring the superior
Judges within the purview of the existing law on that basis,
would amount to enacting a . new law outside the scope of
the existing law and not merely construing it by supplying
the deficiencies to make it workable for achieving the
object of its enactment. It was suggested at the hearing
that the guidelines so suggested and supplied with the aid
of which the existing law could be made applicable to supe-
rior Judges would be akin to the exercise performed by this
Court while dealing with the Administrative Tribunals Act in
S.P. Sam path Kumar v. Union of India & Ors., [1987] 1 SCC
124. I am afraid this analogy is not apt there being no
similarity in the two situations. The Administrative Tribu-
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nals Act as enacted was found to suffer from certain infirm-
ities which would render it invalid and thereby failing to
achieve the object of its enactment unless the deficiencies
therein were supplied. It was to overcome this situation
that this Court in Sam path Kumar suggested ways and means
to overcome those infirmities to achieve the object of
enactment of that legislation and thereby make the legisla-
tion workable as a
274
valid piece of legislation. The situation here is entirely
different. The Act is wholly workable in its existing form
for the public servants within its purview and there is no
impediment in its applicability to the large number of
public servants who have been dealt with thereunder ever
since its enactment. The only question which now arises is:
Whether this piece of legislation also applies to certain
constitutional functionaries such as the High Court Judges
and if the answer is in the negative, the life of the enact-
ment is not jeopardised in any manner. The only result is
that in case such a legislation for superior Judges also is
considered necessary at this point of time, the Parliament
can perform its function by enacting suitable legislation,
it being a virgin field of legislation. It is, therefore,
difficult to appreciate such an argument when the question
for our decision is only of construction of the legislation
as enacted to determine the field of its operation.
Reference may now be made to certain statutory provi-
sions on the basis of which the point has to be decided. The
definition of ’public servant’ given in the Act includes
’every Judge’. Sub-section (1) of Section 5 of the Act
defines ’criminal misconduct’ in its several clauses and
Sub-section (2) thereof prescribes punishment for the of-
fence of criminal misconduct. Section 5A deals with investi-
gation into cases under this Act and Section 6 is the provi-
sion for previous sanction necessary for prosecution. Thus,
no Court shall take cognizance of an offence punishable
under Sub-section (2) of Section 5 of the Act except with
the previous sanction of the competent authority envisaged
by clauses (a), (b) and (c) of Sub-section (1) of Section 6
of the Act. It is for this reason that Section 6 assumes
significance for the applicability of the Act since previous
sanction for prosecution is necessary for taking cognizance
of an offence under Section 5(2) of the Act and in situa-
tions where no such sanction can be envisaged, the Act
cannot be made applicable. The relevant provisions of the
Act as in existence after the 1964 amendment are quoted as
under:
"2. Interpretation.--For the purposes of this
Act, "public servant" means a public servant
as defined in Section 21 of the Indian Penal
Code (45 of 1860).
XXX XXX XXX
4. Presumption where public servant
accepts gratification other than legal remu-
neration.--(1) Where in any trial of an of-
fence punishable under Section 16 1 or Section
165 of the Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860) or
of an offence
275
referred to in clause (a) or clause (b) of
sub-section (1) of Section 5 of this Act
punishable under sub-section (2) thereof, it
is proved that an accused person has accepted
or obtained, or as agreed to accept or at-
tempted to obtain, for himself or for any
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other person, any gratification (other than
legal remuneration) or any valuable thing from
any person, it shall be presumed unless the
contrary is proved that he accepted or ob-
tained, or agreed to accept or attempted to
obtain that gratification or that valuable
thing as the case may be as a motive or reward
such as is mentioned in the said Section 161,
or, as the case may be, without consideration
or for a consideration which he knows to be
inadequate.
(2) Where in any trial of an offence
punishable under Section 165A of the Indian
Penal Code (45 of 1860) or under clause (ii)
or sub-section (3) of Section 5 of this Act,
it is proved that any gratification (other
than legal remuneration) or any valuable thing
has been given or offered to be given or
attempted to be given by an accused person, it
shall be presumed unless the contrary is
proved that he gave or offered to give or
attempted to give that gratification or that
valuable thing as the case may be as a motive
or reward Such as is mentioned in Section 161
of the Indian Penal Code or, as the case may
be, without consideration or for a considera-
tion which he known to be inadequate.
(3) Notwithstanding anything contained in
subsections (1) and (2), the court may decline
to draw the presumption referred to in either
of the said sub-sections if the gratification
or thing aforesaid is, in its opinion, so
trivial that no inference of corruption may
fairly be drawn.
5. Criminal misconduct.-(1) A public
servant is said to commit the offence of
criminal misconduct--
(a) if he habitually accepts or obtains or
agrees to accept or attempts to obtain from
any person for himself or for any other per-
son, any gratification (other than legal
remuneration) as a motive or reward such as is
mentioned in Section 161 of the Indian Penal
Code (45 of 1860), or
276
(b) if he habitually accepts or obtains or
agrees to accept or attempts to obtain for
himself or for any other person, any valuable
thing without consideration or for a consider-
ation which he knows to be’ inadequate from
any person whom he knows to have been, or to
be, or to be likely to be concerned in any
proceeding or business transacted or about to
be transacted by him. or having any connection
with the official functions of himself or of
any public servant to whom he is subordinate,
or from any person whom he knows to be inter-
ested in or related to the person so con-
cerned, or
(c) if he dishonestly or fraudulently misap-
propriates or otherwise converts for his own
use any property entrusted to him or under his
control as a public servant or allows any
other person so to do, or
(d) if he, by corrupt or illegal means or by
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otherwise abusing his position as public
servant, obtains for himself or for any other
person any valuable thing or pecuniary advan-
tage, or
(e) if he or any person on his behalf is in
possession or has, at any time during the
period of his office, been in possession, for
which the public servant cannot satisfactorily
account, of pecuniary resources or property
disproportionate to his known sources of
income.
(2) Any public servant who commits
criminal misconduct shall be punishable with
imprisonment for a term which shall not be
less than one year but which may extend to
seven years and shall also be liable to fine:
Provided that the court may, for any
special reasons recorded in writing, impose a
sentence of imprisonment of less than one
year.
XXX XXX XXX
5A. Investigation into cases under
this Act.--(1) Notwithstanding anything con-
tained in the Code of Crimi-
277
nal Procedure, 1898 (5 of 1898), no police
officer below the rank,--
(a) in the case of the Delhi Special
Police Establishnent, of an Inspector of
Police;
(b) in the presidency-towns of Calcutta and
Madras, of an Assistant Commissioner of Po-
lice;
(c) in the presidency-town of Bombay, of
Superintendent of Police; and
(d) elsewhere, of a Deputy Superintendent of
Police,
shall investigate any offence punishable under
Section 161. Section 165 or Section 165A of
the Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860) or under
Section 5 of this Act without the order of a
Presidency Magistrate or a Magistrate of the
first class, as the case may De, or make any
arrest therefor without a warrant:
Provided that if a police officer not
below the rank of an Inspector of Police is
authorised by the State Government in this
behalf by general or special order, he may
also investigate any such offence without the
order of a Presidency Magistrate or a Magis-
trate of the first class, as the case may be,
or make arrest therefor without a warrant:
Provided further that an offence referred
to in clause (e) of sub-section (1) of Section
5 shall not be investigated without the order
of a police officer not below the rank of a
Superintendent of Police.
(2) If, from information received or
otherwise, a police officer has reason to
suspect the commission of an offence which.he
is empowered to investigate under subsection
(1) and considers that for the purpose of
investigation or inquiry into such offence, it
is necessary to inspect any bankers’ books,
then, notwithstanding anything conrained in
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any law for the time being in force, he may
inspect any bankers’ books in so far as they
relate to the accounts of the person suspected
to have committed that offence or of any other
person suspected to be holding money on
278
behalf of such person, and take or cause to be
taken certified copies of the relevant entries
therefrom, and the bank concerned shall be
bound to assist the police officer in the
exercise of his powers under this sub-section:
Provided that no power under this
sub-section in relation to the accounts of any
person shall be exercised by a police officer
below the rank of Superintendent of Police,
unless he is specially authorised in this
behalf by a police officer of or above the
rank of a Superintendent of Police.
Explanation. In this sub-section,
the expressions "bank" and "bankers’ books"
shall have the meanings assigned to them in
the Bankers’ Books Evidence Act, 189 1 ( 18 of
1891).
6. Previous sanction necessary for
prosecution.--(1) No court shall take cogni-
zance of an offence punishable under Section
161 or Section 164 or Section 165 of the
Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860), or under sub-
section (2) or sub-section (3A) of Section 5
of this Act, alleged to have been committed by
a public servant, except with the previous
sanction,
(a) in the case of a person who is employed in
connection with the affairs of the Union and
is not removable from his office save by or
with the sanction of the Central Government,
of the Central Government;
(b) in the case of a person who is employed in
connection with the affairs of a State and is
not removable from his office save by or with
the sanction of the State Government, of the
State Government;
(c) in the case of any other person, of the
authority competent to remove him from his
office.
(2) Where for any reason whatsoever
any doubt arises whether the previous sanction
as required under subsection (1) should be
given by the Central or State Government or
any other authority, such sanction shall be
given by that Government or authority which
would have been com-
279
petent to remove the public servant from his
office at the time when the offence was
alleged to have been committed."
The relevant provisions of the Constitution of India are as
under:
12 1. Restriction on discussion in
Parliament .--No discussion shall take place
in Parliament with respect to the conduct of
any Judge of the Supreme Court or of a High
Court in the discharge of his duties except
upon a motion for presenting an address to the
President praying for the removal of the Judge
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as hereinafter provided.
XXX XXX XXX
124. Establishment and constitution of
Supreme Court.--(1) .......
XXX XXX XXX
(4) A Judge of the Supreme Court shall
not be removed from his office except by an
order of the President passed after an address
by each House of Parliament supported by a
majority of the total membership of that House
and by a majority of not less than two-thirds
of the members of that House present and
voting has been presented to the President in
the same session for such removal on the
ground of proved misbehaviour or incapacity.
(5) Parliament may by law regulate the
procedure for the presentation of an address
and for the investigation and proof of the
misbehaviour or incapacity of a Judge under
clause (4).
XXX XXX XXX
148. Comptroller and Auditor-General of
India.(1) There shall be a Comptroller and
Auditor-General of India who shall be appoint-
ed by the President by warrant under his hand
and seal and shall only be removed from office
in like manner and on the like grounds as a
Judge of the Supreme Court.
XXX XXX XXX
280
211. Restriction on discussion in
the Legislature. No discussion shall take
place in the Legislature of a State with
respect to the conduct of any Judge of the
Supreme Court or of a High Court in the dis-
charge of his duties.
XXX XXX XXX
218. Application of certain provi-
sions relating to Supreme Court to High
Courts .--The provisions of clauses (4) and
(5) of Article 124 shall apply in relation to
a High Court as they apply in relation to the
Supreme Court with the substitution of refer-
ence to the High Court for references to the
Supreme Court.
XXX XXX XXX
324. Superintendence, direction and
control of elections to be vested in an Elec-
tion Commission.--(1)
XXX XXX XXX
(5) Subject to the provisions
of any law made by Parliament, the conditions
of service and tenure of office of the Elec-
tion Commissions and the Regional Commission-
ers shall be such as the President may by rule
determine:
Provided that the Chief Election
Commissioner shall not be removed from his
office except in like manner and on the like
grounds as a Judge of the Supreme Court and
the conditions of service of the Chief Elec-
tion Commissioner shall not be varied to his
disadvantage after his appointment:
Provided further that any other
Election Commissioner or a Regional Commis-
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sioner shall not be removed from office except
on the recommendation of the Chief Election
Commissioner.
XXX XXX XXX
361. Protection of President and
Governors and Rajpramukhs.--(1) The President,
or the Governor or
281
Rajpramukh of a State, shall not be answerable
to any court for the exercise and performance
of the powers and duties of his office or for
any act done or purporting to be done by him
in the exercise and performance of those
powers and duties:
Provided that the conduct of the
President may be brought under review by any
court, tribunal or body appointed or designat-
ed by either House of Parliament for the
investigation of a charge under Article 61:
Provided further that nothing in
this clause shall be construed as restricting
the right of any person to bring appropriate
proceedings against the Government of India or
the Government of a State.
(2) No criminal proceedings whatso-
ever shall be instituted or continued against
the President, or the Government of a State,
in any court during his term of office.
(3) No process for the arrest or
imprisonment of the President, or the Governor
of a State, shall issue from any court during
his term of office.
(4) No civil proceedings in which
relief is claimed against the President, or
the Governor of a State, shall be instituted
during his term of office in any court in
respect of any act done or purporting to be
done by him in his personal capacity, whether
before or after he entered upon his office as
President, or as Governor of such State, until
the expiration of two months next after notice
in writing has been delivered to the President
or the Governor. as the case may be, or left
at his office stating the nature of the pro-
ceedings, the cause of action therefore, the
name, description and place of residence of
the party by whom such proceedings are to be
instituted and the relief which he claims."
It may also be mentioned that the Judges (Inquiry) Act,
1968 has been enacted by the Parliament to regulate the
procedure for the investigation and proof of the misbeha-
viour or incapacity of a Judge of the Supreme Court or of a
High Court and for the presentation of an
282
address by Parliament to the President and for matters
connected therewith, as contemplated by Articles 124(5) of
the Constitution of India. It is in the background of these
provisions that the point arising for our determination has
to be decided.
I may also at this stage refer to the recommendations
made by the Santhanam Committee which preceded the 1964
amendment in the Act. It is as a result of the 1964 amend-
ment that clause (e) was inserted in Sub-section (1) of
Section 5 of the Act to make the possession of dispropor-
tionate assets by a public servant by itself a substantive
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offence of criminal misconduct, while prior to this amend-
ment such a provision was merely a rule of evidence con-
tained in Sub-section (3) of Section 5 as initially enacted
which was then available only to prove the offence of crimi-
nal misconduct defined in clauses (a) to (d) of Sub-section
(1) of Section 5. In the Report of the Santhanam Committee,
certain portions relating to the judiciary which may throw
light on the question before us are extracted as under:
"SECTION 12
MISCELLANEOUS
XXX XXX XXX
12.2 We did not consider the judici-
ary to be included in our terms of reference.
Except the Supreme Court and some subordinate
courts in the Union Territories, the Govern-
ment of India have no direct relation with the
administration of the judiciary except that
appointment of High Court Judges is made by
the President. It has to be borne in mind,
however, that all courts in india are common
to the Centre and the States and can entertain
and decide cases relating to exclusively
Central subjects. Therefore, integrity of the
judiciary is of paramount importance even for
the proper functioning of the Central Govern-
ment.
Though we did not make any direct
inquiries, we were informed by responsible
persons including Vigilance and Special Police
Establishment Officers that corruption exists
in the lower ranks of the judiciary all over
India and in some places it has spread to the
higher ranks also. We were deeply distressed
at this information. We, therefore, suggest
that the Chief Justice of India in consulta-
tion with the Chief Justices
283
of the High Courts should arrange for a thor-
ough inquiry into the incidence of corruption
among the judiciary, and evolve, in consulta-
tion with the Central and State Governments,
proper measures to prevent and eliminate it.
Perhaps the setting up of vigilance organisa-
tion under the direct control of the Chief
Justice of every High Court coordinated by a
Central Vigilance Officer under the Chief
Justice of India may prove to be an appropri-
ate method.
XXX XXX XXX
SUMMARY OF CONCLUSIONS AND
RECOMMENDATIONS
XXX XXX XXX
117. The Chief Justice of India in consulta-
tion with the Chief Justices of the High
Courts should arrange for a thorough inquiry
into the incidence of corruption, among the
judiciary, and evolve, in consultation with
the Central and State Governments, proper
measures to prevent and eliminate it. Perhaps
the setting up of vigilance organisations
under the direct control of the Chief Justice
of every High Court coordinated by a Central
Vigilance Officer under the Chief Justice of
India may prove to be an appropriate method.
(Para. 12.2)
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XXX XXX XXX
REPORT ON THE GOVERNMENT SERVANTS’
CONDUCT RULES
XXX XXX XXX
Rule 15
15. The Committee attaches great impor-
tance to the changes recommended in the exist-
ing Rule 15 relating to the acquisition and
disposal of property by Government servants.
On the one hand, these reports serve as a
check against corruption and on the other, it
may be irritating to honest Government serv-
ants to be subject to restrictions
284
not imposed on other citizens. It is also
necessary to ensure that the reports are such
as to serve the purpose for which they are
obtained. Further, no reports need be obtained
from those Government servants who have no
opportunity to enrich themselves by unlawful
means.
16. The most important change made by the
Committee in this rule is the replacement of
the annual immovable property return by a
complete periodical statement of assets and
liabilities. In the circumstances now obtain-
ing in the country, the immovable property
return has ceased to have much significance.
The Committee considers that in order to
enable Government to ascertain whether any
Government servant is in possession of assets
disproportionate to his known sources of
income or whether he is running into debt, it
is necessary that the Government servant
should furnish a complete statement of his
assets and liabilities periodically.
17. The Committee considers that only the
more/ important items of movable property
should be reported specifically and that it
would be sufficient if Government servants
report the total value of other movable
property except articles of daily use like
clothes, utensils, crockery, books, etc. But
it is essential that the value of ’movable
property should be stated in the statement of
assets and liabilities.
18. The Committee considered the argument
that there was no need for the submission of
periodical returns of assets and liabilities
and that it would be sufficient if such a
statement is given once either on entry or
after promulgation of these rules and that
thereafter it should be enough if the Govern-
ment servant is required to report all trans-
actions in immovable property and all transac-
tions in movable property exceeding a speci-
fied value. The Committee decided to recommend
that Government servants should be required to
submit a periodical statement of assets and
liabilities, as it would not be reasonable to
require the Government servants to report all
the innumerable small transactions taking
place continually. But as these small transac-
tions may cumulatively be sizable and have a
big effect on his financial position, the
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purpose will
285
be served only by obtaining a periodical
balance-sheet. The Committee, however, consid-
ers that the reports need not be frequent and
that it may perhaps be sufficient if they are
submitted once in five years.
19. Another point that was consid-
ered by the Committee was whether jewellery
should be included within the definition of
movable property. The Committee recognises
that inclusion of jewellery may be considered
to be an unnecessary intrusion into the pri-
vate affairs of a Government servant. But
jewellery constitute important assets and if
excluded from the definition of movable
property, the balance-sheet submitted by the
Government servant may not set out the true
picture."
(emphasis supplied)
In view of the decision by a Constitution Bench in R.S.
Nayak v. A.R. Antulay, [1984] 2 SCC 183 the correctness of
which was not disputed before us, we have to assume for the
purpose of this case that no sanction under Section 6 of the
Act was required-for prosecution of the appellant since
cognizance of the offence was taken after the appellant
ceased to hold the office of Chief Justice on 7.4.1976 on
his retirement. It was, however, contended that for the
purpose of deciding the question of applicability of the Act
to the appellant as a Judge or Chief Justice of the High
Court, the office with reference to which the offence under
the Act is alleged to have been committed, it is necessary
to consider the feasibility of grant of sanction under
Section 6 of the Act for prosecution of a person holding
such an office. In other words, the argument is that not-
withstanding the fact that no sanction was required for
prosecution of the appellant after his retirement, the need
and feasibility of grant of the sanction under Section 6 of
the Act if he was prosecuted before his retirement is the
test to determine the applicability of the Act to a person
holding, the office of a Judge or Chief Justice of a High
Court. It is argued that if the grant of sanction under
Section 6 of the Act for prosecution of the incumbent for
the offence is not feasible or envisaged, the clear indica-
tion is that holder of such office does not fall within the
purview of the Act. The question of grant of sanction under
Section 6 for the prosecution of a Judge or Chief Justice of
a High Court for an offence punishable under Section 5(2) of
the Act is, therefore, of considerable importance to decide
the main question in this appeal.
Clauses (a), (b) and (c) in Sub-section (1) of Section 6
exhaus-
286
tively provide for the competent authority to grant sanction
for prosecution in case of all the public servants failing
within the purview of the Act. Admittedly, such previous
sanction is a condition precedent for taking cognizance of
an offence punishable under the Act, of a public servant who
is prosecuted during his continuance in the office. It
follows that the public servant falling within the purview
of the Act must invariably fall within one of the three
clauses in Sub-section (1) of Section 6. It follows that the
holder of an office, even though a ’public servant’ accord-
ing to the definition in the Act, who does not fall within
any of the clauses (a), (b) or (c) of Sub-section (1) of
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Section 6 must be held to be outside the purview of the Act
since this special enactment was not enacted to cover that
category of public servants inspite of the wide definition
of ’public servant’ in the Act. This is the only manner in
which these provisions of the Act can be harmonized and
given full effect. The scheme of the Act is that a public
servant who commits the offence of criminal misconduct, as
defined in the seven clauses of Sub-section (1) of Section
5, can be punished in accordance with Subsection (2) of
Section 5, after investigation of the offence in the manner
prescribed and with the previous sanction of the competent
authority obtained under Section 6 of the Act, in a trial
conducted according to the prescribed procedure. The grant
of previous sanction under Section 6 being a condition
precedent for the prosecution of a public servant covered by
the Act, it must follow that the holder of an office who may
be a public servant according to the wide definition of the
expression in the Act but whose category for the grant of
sanction for prosecution is not envisaged by Section 6 of
the Act, is outside the purview of the Act, not intended to
be covered by the Act. This is the only manner in which a
harmonious constitution of the provisions of the Act can be
made for the purpose of achieving the object of that enact-
ment. This appears to be the obvious conclusion even for a
case like the present where no such sanction for prosecution
is necessary on the view taken in Antulay, and not chal-
lenged before us, that the sanction for prosecution under
Section 6 is not necessary when cognizance of the offence is
taken after the accused has ceased to hold the office in
question.
In this context, it is useful to recall the analysis of
Section 6 made in R.S. Nayak v. A.R. Antulay, [1984] 2 SCC
183, which is as under:
"Offences prescribed in Sections 161, 164 and
165 IPC and Section 5 of the 1947 Act have an
intimate and inseparable relation with the
office of a public servant. A public servant
occupies office which renders him a public
servant and
287
occupying. the office carries with it the
powers conferred on the office. Power general-
ly is not conferred on an individual person.
In a society governed by rule of law power is
conferred on office or acquired by statutory
status and the individual occupying the office
or on whom status is conferred enjoys the
power of office or power flowing from the
status. The holder of the office alone would
have opportunity to abuse or misuse the of-
fice. These sections codify a well-recognised
truism that power has the tendency to corrupt.
It is the holding of the office which gives an
opportunity to use it for corrupt motives.
Therefore, the corrupt conduct is directly
attributable and flows from the power con-
ferred on the office. The interrelation and
interdependence between individual and the
office he holds is substantial and not severa-
ble. Each of the three clauses of subsection
(1) of Section 6 uses the expression ’office’
and the power to grant sanction is conferred
on the authority competent to remove the
public servant from his office and Section 6
requires a sanction before taking cognizance
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of offences committed by public servant. The
offence would be committed by the public
servant by misusing or abusing the power of
office and it is from that office, the author-
ity must be competent to remove him so as to
be entitled to grant sanction. The removal
would bring about cessation of interrelation
between the office and abuse by the holder of
the office. The link between power with oppor-
tunity to abuse and the holder of office would
be severed by removal from office. Therefore,
when a public servant is accused of an offence
of taking gratification other then legal
remuneration for doing or forebearing to do an
official act (Section 161 (IPC) or as a public
servant abets offences punishable under Sec-
tions 161 and 163 (Section 164 IPC) or as
public servant obtains a valuable thing with-
out consideration from person concerned in any
proceeding or business transacted by such
public servant (Section 165 IPC) or commits
criminal misconduct as defined in Section 5 of
the 1947 Act, it is implicit in the various
offences that the public servant has misused
or abused the power of office held by him as
public servant. The expression ’office’ in the
three sub-clauses of Section 6(1) would clear-
ly denote that office which the public servant
misused or abused for corrupt motives for
which he is to be prosecuted and in respect of
which a sanction to prosecute him is necessary
by the competent authority
288
entitled to remove him from that office which
he has abused. This interrelation between the
office and its abuse if severed would render
Section 6 devoid of any meaning. And this
interrelation clearly provides a clue to the
understanding of the provision in Section 6
providing for sanction by a competent authori-
ty who would be able to judge the action of
the public servant before removing the bar, by
granting sanction, to the taking of the cogni-
zance of offences by the court against the
public servant. Therefore, it unquestionably
follows that the sanction to prosecute can be
given by an authority competent to remove the
public servant from the office which he has
misused or abused because that authority alone
would be able to know whether there has been a
misuse or abuse of the office by the public
servant and not some rank outsider. By a
catena of decisions, it has been held that the
authority entitled to grant sanction must
apply its mind to the facts of the case,
evidence collected and other incidental facts
before according sanction. A grant of sanction
is not an idle formality but a solemn and
sacrosanct act which removes the umbrella of
protection of Government servants against
frivolous prosecutions and the aforesaid
requirements must therefore, be strictly
complied with before any prosecution could be
launched against public servants. (See Mohd.
lqbal Ahmad v. State of A.P., [1979] 2 SCR
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1007: [1979] 4 SCC 172: [1979] SCC (Cri.) 926:
AIR 1979 SC 677)."The Legislature advisedly
conferred power on the authority competent to
remove the public servant from the office to
grant sanction for the obvious reason that
that authority alone would be able, when facts
and evidence are placed before him, to judge
whether a serious offence is committed or the
prosecution is either frivolous or specula-
tive. That authority alone would be competent
to judge whether on the facts alleged, there
has been an abuse or misuse of office held by
the public servant. That authority would be in
a position to know what was the power con-
ferred on the office which the public servant
holds, how that power could be abused for
corrupt motive and whether prima facie it has
been so done. That competent authority alone
would know the nature and functions discharged
by the public servant holding the office and
whether the same has been abused or misused.
It is the vertical hierarchy between the
authority competent to remove the public
servant from that office and the nature of the
office held by the
289
public servant against whom sanction is sought
which would indicate a hierarchy and which
would therefore, permit inference of knowledge
about the functions and duties of the office
and its misuse or abuse by the public servant.
That is why the Legislature clearly provided
that that authority alone would be competent
to grant sanction which is entitled to remove
the public servant against whom sanction is
sought from the office."
(emphasis supplied)
(para 23, pp. 204-206)
It is significant from the above extract in Antulay that
for the purpose of grant of sanction under Section 6 of the
Act to prosecute the public servant, a ’vertical hierarchy
between the authority competent to remove the public servant
from that office and the nature of the office held by the
public servant against whom sanction is sought’ is clearly
envisaged and, therefore, the authority competent to remove
the public servant from that office should be vertically
superior in the hierarchy in which the office exists having
the competence to judge the, action of the public servant
before removing the bar by granting sanction. In other
words, Section 6 applies only in cases where there is a
vertical hierarchy of public offices and the public servant
against whom sanction is sought is under the sanctioning
authority in that hierarchy. It would follow that where the
office held by the public servant is not a part of a verti-
cal hierarchy in which there is an authority above the
public ’servant in that hierarchy, by the very scheme of
Section 6 it can have no application and holder of such
office who does not have any vertical superior above him in
the absence of any such hierarchy cannot be within the ambit
of the enactment, the Act not being envisaged or enacted for
holder of such public office. The decisions of this Court
have unequivocally held that a Judge or Chief Justice of a
High Court is a constitutional functionary, even though he
holds a public office and in that sense, may be included in
the wide definition of ’public servant’. It is for this
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reason that the learned Solicitor General did not place
reliance on clauses (a) and (b) of Sub-section (1) of Sec-
tion 6 in the present case but relied on clause (c) thereof,
to contend that sanction thereunder can be obtained for the
prosecution of a Judge or Chief Justice of a High Court
since the holder of such an office can be removed from
office by the President in accordance with clause (4) of
Article 124 of the Constitution. This is the only argument
for this purpose and, therefore, its tenability has to be
tested.
Section 6(1)(c) provides for previous sanction ’in the case
of any .
290
other person, of the authority competent to remove him from
his office’. Clauses (4) and (5) of Article 124 which apply
to a Judge of the Supreme Court are made applicable to
Judges of the High Courts by virtue of Article 218. These
may be re-quoted here for readyreference:
"124. Establishment and constitution of Su-
preme Court’(1) ...
XXX XXX XXX
(4) A Judge of the Supreme Court
shall not be removed from his office except by
an order of the President passed after an
address by each House of Parliament supported
by a majority of the total membership of the
House and by a majority of not less than two-
thirds of the members of that House present
and voting has been presented to the President
in the same session for such removal on the
ground of proved misbehaviour or incapacity.
(5) Parliament may by law regulate
the procedure for the presentation of an
address and for the investigation and proof of
the misbehaviour or incapacity of a Judge
under clause (4).
XXX XXX XXX
218. Application of certain provi-
sions relating to Supreme Court to High
Courts.- The provisions of clauses (4) and (5)
of Article 124 Shall apply in relation to a
High Court as they apply in relation to the
Supreme Court with the substitution of refer-
ences to the High Court for references to the
Supreme Court."
According to Article 124(4), a Judge can be removed
from his office by an order of the President passed after an
address by each House of Parliament supported by the pre-
scribed majority on the ground of proved misbehaviour or
incapacity. Since the order of removal in such a case is to
be made by the President, the learned Solicitor General
contended that the competent authority to remove such a
Judge as required by Section 6(1)(c) is the President and it
is in this manner that Section 6(1)(c) is attracted. The
question is whether this argument is tenable.
291
There are several fallacies in this argument. Section
6(1)(c) speaks of ’authority competent to remove’ which
plainly indicates the substantive competence of the authori-
ty to remove, not merely the procedural or formal part of
it. In other words, the authority itself should be competent
to remove or the one to decide the question of removal and
not the which merely obeys or implements by the decision of
some other authority. This conclusion is reinforced’by the
above extract from the Antulay decision, which speaks of the
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vertical hierarchy between the authority competent to remove
the public servant and the nature of the office held by the
public servant indicating that the removing authority should
have the competence to take a decision on the material
placed before it for the purpose of deciding whether the
public servant against whom sanction is sought, has been
prima facie guilty of abuse of his office so that there is
occasion to bring about cessation of interrelation between
the office and abuse by the holder of the office by his
removal therefrom. Obviously, the competent sanctioning
authority envisaged thereby is a vertical superior in the
hierarchy having some power of superintendence over the
functioning of the public servant. Where no such relation-
ship exists in the absence of any vertical hierarchy and the
holder of the public office is a constitutional functionary
not subject to power of superintendence of any superior,
Section 6 can have no application by virtue of the scheme
engrafted therein. The expression ’authority competent to
remove’ under Section 6(1)(c), unless construed in this
manner, will foul with the construction made on Section 6
andits scheme in the Antulay decision.
In S.P. Gupta & Ors. etc. etc. v. Union of India & Ors. etc.
etc., 1982] 2 SCR 365 it was clearly pointed out that a High
Court Judge is a high constitutional functionary and while
dealing with the question of the machinery having legal
sanction to deal with a High Court Judge against whom alle-
gations of lack of intergrity and corruption were made, it
was stated as under:
". ..... Baldly put, the question
is: Should an Additional Judge whose misbeha-
viour or lack of integrity has come to the
fore he continued as an Additional Judge or
confirmed as a Permanent Judge? The answer at
the first impulse and rightly would be in the
negative but the question requires deeper
consideration. If the misbehaviour or lack of
integrity is glaringly self-evident the ques-
tion of his continuance obviously cannot arise
and in all probabilities will not engage the
attention of the appointing authority,
292
for, the concerned Judge in such a situation
would himself resign but when we talk of
misbehaviour or lack of integrity on the part
of an Additional Judge having come to the
fore, by and large the instances are of sus-
pected misbehaviour and/or reported lack of
integrity albeit based on opinions expressed
in responsible and respectable quarters and
the serious question that arises is whether in
such cases the concerned Additional Judge
should be dropped merely on opinion material
or concrete facts and material in regard to
allegations of misbehaviour and/or lack of
integrity should be insisted upon? In my view
since the question relates to the continuance
of a high constitutional functionary like the
Additional Judge of High Court it would be
jeopardising his security and judicial inde-
pendence if action is taken on the basis or
merely opinion material. Moreover, no machin-
ery having legal sanction behind it for hold-
ing an inquiry--disciplinary or otherwise
against the concerned Judge on allegations of
misbehaviour and or lack of integrity obtains
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in the Constitution or any law made by the
Parliament, save and except the regular proc-
ess of removal indicated in Art. 124(4) and
(5) read with Art. 218 and the Judges (In-
quiry) Act, 1968."Therefore, the important
question that arises in such cases of suspect-
ed misbehaviour and/or reported lack of integ-
rity is who will decide and how whether the
concerned Judge has in fact indulged in any
misbehaviour or act of corruption? In the
absence of satisfactory machinery possessing
legal sanction to reach a positive conclusion
on the alleged misbehaviour or an act of
corruption the decision to drop him shall have
been arrived at merely on the basis of opin-
ions, reports, rumours or gossip and apart
from being unfair and unjust to him such a
course will amount to striking at the root of
judicial independence. The other alternative,
namely, to continue him as an Additional Judge
for another term or to make him permanent if a
vacancy is available and then take action for
his removal under the regular process indicat-
ed in Art. 124(4) and (5) read with Art. 2 18
and Judges (Inquiry) Act,1968 may sound absurd
but must be held to be inevitable if judicial
independence, a cardinal faith of our Consti-
tution, is to be preserved and safeguarded.
Not to have a corrupt Judge or a Judge who has
misbehaved is unquestionably in public inter-
est but at the same time preserving judicial
independence is of the highest public inter-
est. It is a question of
293
choosing the lesser evil and in inevitable
course has to’ be adopted not for the protec-
tion of the corrupt or dishonest judge but for
protecting several other honest, conscientious
and hard-working Judges by preserving their
independence; it is a price which the Society
has to pay to avoid the greater evil that will
ensue if judicial independence is sacrificed.
Considering the question from the angle of
public interest therefore, I am clearly of the
view that while considering the question of
continuance of the sitting Additional Judges
on the expiry of their initial term either as
Additional Judges or as Permanent Judges the
test of suitability contemplated within the
consultative process under Art. 217(1) should
not be invoked--at least until such time as
proper machinery possessing legal sanction is
provided for enabling a proper inquiry against
an alleged errant Judge less cumbersome than
the near impeachment process contemplated by
Art. 124(4) and (5) of the Constitution."
(Tulzapurkar, J. ) (pp. 920-21)
" ..... As the law now stands it is
not open to any single individual, whether it
is the President or the Chief Justice of India
or anybody else to take cognizance of any
allegations of misbehaviour or of incapacity
of a Judge and to take any legal action on
their basis under the Judges (Inquiry)
Act,/1968. One hundred Members of the Lok
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Sabha or fifty Members of the Rajya Sabha
alone can initiate any action on such allega-
tions. Naturally, all others are excluded from
taking cognizance of them and acting on
them .......
(Venkataramiah, J.) (pp. 1338-39)
(emphasis supplied)
Even though the above observations were made in the
context of continuance in office of Additional Judge of the
High Court and the transfer of Judges to another High Court,
yet the nature of office of a High Court Judge and the only
legal sanction available under the existing law to deal with
them even in the event of allegations of corruption was
clearly spelt out. It was pointed out that ordinarily such a
person faced with cogent material against him would resign,
but in case he does not, the only remedy available is his
removal from office in accordance with clauses (4) and (5)
of Article 124 read with Article
294
218 of the Constitution till a suitable provision with legal
sanction is made. It was also pointed out that the object
served in this manner was the greater public interest to
preserve independence of judiciary and not to protect the
corrupt Judge who was an exception. The scheme of the exist-
ing law to deal with such situations was considered at
length and it was also held that even the power to transfer
under Article 222 of the Constitution to another High Court
could not be exercised for these reasons.
In this context, clause (5) of Article 124 is also of
considerable significance. The construction made of the
provisions of the Act must also fit in with the scheme of
clauses (4) and (5) of Article 124 read with Article 2 18 of
the Constitution in order to present a harmonious scheme.
Clause (5) of Article 124 enables enactment of a special law
by the Parliament to regulate the procedure for presentation
of an address and for the ’investigation’ and ’proof’ of the
’misbehaviour’ or incapacity of a Judge under clause (4). It
is in exercise of this power that the Parliament has enacted
the Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968. It is significant that
clause (5) of Article 124 covers the field of ’investiga-
tion’ and ’proof’ of the ’misbehaviour’ of a Judge. There
can be no doubt that the expression ’misbehaviour’ is of
wide import and includes within its ambit criminal miscon-
duct as defined in Sub-section (1) of Section 5 of the Act
as also lesser misconduct of a Judge falling short of crimi-
nal misconduct. The special law envisaged by Article 124(5)
for dealing with the misbehaviour of a Judge covers the
field of ’investigation’ and ’proof’ of the ’misbehaviour’
and the only punishment provided is by Article 124(4) of
removal from office. There is no escape from the conclusion
that Article 124(5) is wide enough to include within its
ambit every conduct of a Judge amounting to misbehaviour
including criminal misconduct and prescribes the procedure
for investigation and proof thereof. Thus, even for the
procedure for investigation into any misbehaviour of a Judge
as well as its proof, a law enacted by the Parliament under
Article 124(5) is envisaged in the constitutional scheme.
Such a law in the form of the Judges (inquiry) Act, 1968 and
the rules framed thereunder has been enacted. These provi-
sions were made in the Constitution and the law thereunder
enacted when the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947 was in
the Statute Book. The prior enactment and existence of the
Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947 at the time then clause
(4) and (5) of Article 124 of the Constitution were framed,
does indicate the constitutional scheme that a separate
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parliamentary law to deal with the investigation and proof
of misbehaviour of a Judge was clearly contemplated by
providing a special machinery for this category of constitu-
tional functionaries
295
notwithstanding the general law available and applicable to
the public servants in general, which included the Preven-
tion of Corruption Act, 1947. If special provisions in the
form of clauses (4) and (5) of Article 124 and Article 2 18
of the Constitution and the special enactment by the Parlia-
ment under Article 124(5) were provided in the constitution-
al scheme for Judges of the High Courts and the Supreme
Court, there can be no valid reason to hold that they are
governed by the general provisions in addition to these
special provisions enacted only for them. The need for these
special provisions is a clear pointer in the direction of
inapplicability to them of the general provisions applicable
to the public servants holding other public offices, not as
constitutional functionaries. Construction of Section
6(1)(c) of the Act as suggested by the learned Solicitor
General by treating the President as ,the competent authori-
ty to remove a High Court Judge would conflict with the
provisions enacted in clauses (4) and (5) of Article 124
read with Article 218 of the Constitution. Such a construc-
tion has undoubtedly to be avoided. This is more so, since
the rejection of such an argument would not in any manner
jeopardise the provisions of the Act as it would result only
in the failure of the attempt to bring the constitutional
functionaries such as Judges of the High Courts and the
Supreme Court within the purview of that Act, while the Act
would continue to apply to the public servants in general
who fall within the scheme of Section 6 of the Act for the
purpose of grant of previous sanction for prosecution which
is a condition precedent for cognizance of an offence pun-
ishable under that Act.
It can also not be overlooked that the Santhanam Commit-
tee Report did not consider the judiciary within its purview
and it merely made certain recommendations to devise a
machinery involving the Chief Justice of India to deal with
the cases of errant Judges. The 1964 amendment made in the
Act pursuant to the recommendations of the Santhanam Commit-
tee did not make any amendment in the Act to indicate that
Judges of the High Courts and the Supreme Court were also
brought within the purview of the Act. It was thereafter
that the Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1963 and the rules framed
thereunder were enacted to provide for the investigation and
proof of allegations of misbehaviour of a Judge in accord-
ance with Article 124(5) of the Constitution. The decision
in S.P. Gupta was rendered much later and while dealing with
the situations arising out of allegations of misbehaviour
including corruption against High Court Judges, it was held
that the only machinery with legal sanction in existence is
that available under clauses (4) and (5) of Article 124 of
the Constitution. It is reasonable to assume that while
rendering the decision in S.P. Gupta,
296
where in the question of dealing with some Judges against
whom allegations of lack of integrity and corruption also
were made and the question was of the machinery available
for dealing with them, the learned Judges could not have
been unaware of the provisions of the Act while taking the
view that the only legal machinery available under the
existing law is that in accordance with clauses (4) and (5)
of Article 124 of the Constitution. These are strong reasons
to hold that Section 6(1)(c) of the Act is inappliable to a
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Judge of a High Court or the Supreme Court and for that
reason such constitutional functionaries do not fall within
the purview of the Act.
An additional reason’indicating inapplicability of the
Act is the practical difficulty in applying criminal miscon-
duct, defined in clause (e) of Sub-section (1) of Section 5
of the Act, to a Judge of a High Court or the Supreme Court.
The history of insertion of this clause:, y the 1964 amend-
ment to the Act is well-known. What was earlier a rule of
evidence in Sub-section (3) of Section 5 of the Act, was
made a substantive offence of criminal misconduct by insert-
ing clause (e) in Sub-section (1) of Section 5 by this
amendment. Apart from the argument of the learned counsel
for the appellant that the inability to satisfactorily
account for possession of disproportionate assets is an
ingredient of the offence in clause (e), practical require-
ment of this clause is a further pointer to indicate inap-
plicability thereof to a Judge of a High Court or the Su-
preme Court. The fact remains that while according sanction
to prosecute under Section 6 of the Act, the competent
authority has to satisfy itself about the public servant’s
inability to satisfactorily account for possession of dis-
proportionate assets. As held in Antulay, the competent
authority before granting sanction has to apply its mind and
be satisfied about the existence of a prima facie case for
prosecution of the public servant on the basis of the mate-
rial placed before it. In order to form an objective opin-
ion, the competent authority must undoubtedly have before it
the version of the public servant on the basis of which the
conclusion can be reached whether it amounts to satisfactory
account or not. It is well-known and is also clear from the
Report of the Santhanam Committee that the rules applicable
to the public servants in general regulating their conduct
require them to furnish periodical information of their
assets which form a part of their service record. The recom-
mendations of the Santhanam Committee after which the 1964
amendment inserting clause (e) in Sub-section (1) of Section
5 was made, suggest some amendment to the rules governing
the conduct of public servants for giving periodical infor-
mation of all their assets. Prescribing the substantive
offence by insertion of clause (e.) as a part of the same
schem
297
of amendment also suggests the manner in which this require-
ment of the offence of inability to satisfactorily account
can be examined by the competent authority while granting
sanction to prosecute the public servant. These words in
clause (e) have to be given some meaning which would place
the burden on the prosecution, howsoever light, to make out
a prima facie case for obtaining sanction of the competent
authority under Section 6 of the Act and this can be done
only if it is read as a part of the scheme under which the
public servant is required to furnish particulars of his
assets with reference to which the disproportion and his
inability to satisfactorily account can be inferred. This
requirement can be easily satisfied in the case of public
servants governed by conduct rules requiring them to furnish
periodical returns of their/assets and to intimate the
superior in the hierarchy of acquisition of every material
assets, so that his service record at all times contains
particulars of his known assets. In the case of such public
servants whenever sanction to prosecute is sought under
Section 6 of the Act, the competent authority can form the
requisite opinion on the basis of the available material
including the service record of the public servant to come
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to the conclusion whether the offence under clause (e) of
possession of disproportionate assets which the public
servant cannot satisfactorily account is made out prima
facie. In the case of Judges of the High Courts and the
Supreme Court, there is no such requirement under any provi-
sion of furnishing particulars of their assets so as to
provide a record thereof with reference to which such an
opinion can be formed and there is no vertical superior with
legal authority enabling obtaining of information from the
concerned Judge. It does appear that this too is a pointer
in the direction that even after the 1964 amendment of the
Act following the Report of the Santhanam Committee when
clause (e) was inserted in Sub-section (1) of Section 5 of
the Act, the Legislature did not intend to include Judges of
the High Courts and the Supreme Court within the purview of
the enactment.
If the Act is applicable to Judges of the High Courts
and the Supreme Court, it is obvious that the same must
apply also to the Chief Justice of India, the Comptroller
and Auditor General and the Chief Election Commissioner.
Incongruous results would follow in such an event, even
assuming that the guidelines suggested by the learned Solic-
itor General, are deemed to be incorporated in the Act by
implication while dealing with persons holding these of-
fices. Apart from the legal permissibility of implying these
guidelines in the Act, there are obvious practical difficul-
ties which cannot be overcome. In the proposed guidelines,
it was suggested that the involvement of the Chief Justice
of India invariably should be read even for commencing the
298
investigation into the offence and the President, while
granting the sanction under Section 6(1)(c), would also act
on the advice of the Chief Justice of India. Assuming that
it is permissible to do so in the absence of any such provi-
sion in the Act, the problem which stares us in the face is,
what is to be done where such action is contemplated against
the Chief Justice of India himself. Any provision which
cannot apply to the Chief Justice of India, cannot obviously
apply to the Judges of the Supreme Court, or for that matter
even to the High Court Judges, since the Chief Justice of
India is not a vertical superior of any of them, there being
no such vertical hierarchy and the Chief Justice of India
having no power of superintendence even over the High Court
Judges, much less the Supreme Court Judges: The incumbent of
the office of Chief Justice of India exercises only moral
authority over his colleagues in the Supreme Court and the
High Court Judges, which has no legal sanction behind it
making it justiciable. In the case of the Comptroller and
Auditor General and the Chief Election Commissioner, the
situation would be more piquant. Obviously, the Chief Jus-
tice of India cannot be involved in the process relating to
them and there is none else to fill that role in that situa-
tion. The Constitution, while providing that their position
would be akin to that of a Judge of the Supreme Court, could
not have intended to place them on a pedestal higher than
that of a Supreme Court Judge. The infirmity of this argu-
ment advanced by the learned Solicitor General invoking the
aid of certain implied guidelines involving the Chief Jus-
tice of India in the process of contemplated action under
the Act against a Judge of the High Court or the Supreme
Court, leaves more questions unanswered that it answers.
That apart, if the Act was intended to apply to these con-
stitutional functionaries, it could not have been enacted
leaving such gaping holes which are incapable of being
plugged to present a comprehensive scheme for this purpose.
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It was also suggested at the hearing that the absence of
need of sanction for prosecution under Section 6 of the Act
after the public servant ceases to hold office as held in
Antulay, suggests answer to the question of construction
posed in this case. It does not appear to be so. The need
for sanction under Section 6 for prosecution of the holder
of a public office indicates the ambit and scope of the
enactment for deciding whether the holder of a public office
falls within the purview of the enactment. No doubt, as held
in Antulay, no sanction for prosecution under Section 6 is
required after the public servant ceases to hold office, but
it does not imply that every holder of a public office after
ceasing to hold that office is within the purview of the
enactment, even though during the tenure in office, only
those public servants are
299
within its ambit in whose case sanction under Section 6 must
be obtained. The ambit of the enactment is to be determined
on the basis of the public office held by the public serv-
ant, which office is alleged to have been abused during the
tenure for committing the offence of criminal misconduct
under the Act and it is not the fact of continuance in that
office or ceasing to hold it which decides the ambit of the
enactment. In other words, if the holder of a public office
during his tenure in office cannot be prosecuted without
sanction under Section 6, then, as held in Antulay, no
sanction-for his prosecution after ceasing to hold the
office may be necessary, but his prosecution is made because
while in office he could be prosecuted With the previous
sanction under Section 6. Conversely, if the holder of a
public office while continuing in that office could not be
prosecuted under this Act on account of inapplicability of
Section 6 and, therefore, the non-feasibility of previous
sanction for prosecution under Section 6, then on his ceas-
ing to hold the office, he is not brought within the purview
of the Act merely because Antulay decides that no sanction
for prosecution under Section 6 is ’needed after the holder
of a public office ceases to hold that office. It is for the
purpose of construing the provisions of the enactment and
determining the scope and ambit thereof and for deciding
whether the holder of a public office comes within the
purview of the enactment that the feasibility of previous
sanction for prosecution and applicability of Section 6 of
the Act is important. In short, it is for the purpose of
construction of the provisions of the enactment and deter-
mining its scope that Section 6 which prescribes the condi-
tion precedent of previous sanction for prosecution for the
offence of criminal misconduct punishable under Section 5(2)
of the Act, holds the key which unlocks the true vistas of
the enactment.
The concept of sanction for prosecution by a superior is
so inextricably woven into the fabric of the enactment that
the pattern is incomplete without it. The clear legislative
intent is that the enactment applies only to those in whose
case sanction of this kind is contemplated and those to whom
the provision of sanction cannot squarely apply are outside
its ambit. The provision for sanction is like the keystone
in the arch of the enactment. Remove the keystone of sanc-
tion and the arch crumbles.
The conclusion that the Act does not apply to these
constitutional functionaries, namely, Judges of the High
Courts, Judges of the Supreme Court, the Comptroller and
Additor General and the Chief Election Commissioner, need
not be viewed with scepticism or treated as their exclusion
from the purview of the Act as if they are ordinarily
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300
within its ambit. A proper perception would indicate that
these constitutional functionaries were never intended to
fail within the ambit of the Act as initially enacted in
1947, when provisions similar to Articles 124(4) & (5) of
the Constitution were present in the Government of India
Act, 1935, nor was any such attempt made by amendment of the
Act’ in 1964 subsequent to the Report of the Santhanam
Committee and the same position continues in the Prevention
of Corruption Act, 1988. If there is now a felt need to
provide for such a situation, the remedy lies in suitable
parliamentary legislation for the purpose preserving the
independence of judiciary free from likely executive influ-
ence while providing a proper and adequate machinery for
investigation into allegations of corruption against such
constitutional functionaries and for their trial and punish-
ment after the investigation. The remedy is not to extend
the existing law and make it workable by reading into it
certain guidelines for which there is no basis in it, since
the Act was not intended to apply to them. The test of
applicability of the existing law would be the legal sanc-
tion and justiciability of the proposed guidelines without
which it is unworkable in the case of such persons. In fact,
the very need to read the proposed guidelines in the exist-
ing law by implication is a clear indication that the law as
it exists does not apply to them. Making the law applicable
with the aid of the suggested guidelines, is not in the
domain of judicial craftmanship, but a naked usurpation of
legislative power in a virgin field.
It appears that the framers of the Constitution, while
dealing with such constitutional functionaries, contemplated
merely their removal from office in the manner provided in
Article 124(4) as the only punishment; and a special law
enacted by the Parliament under Article 124(5), even for
investigation and proof of any misbehaviour alleged against
a superior Judge instead of the general law was clearly
visualised when the alleged misbehaviour is connected with
his office. A charge of corruption against a superior Judge
amounting to criminal misconduct by abuse of his office
would certainly fail within the ambit of misbehaviour con-
templated under Article 124(5), since misbehaviour of a
Judge in the form of corruption by abuse of his office would
be an act of gross misbehaviour justifying his removal from
office, irrespective of other legal sanction, if any, to
punish a corrupt Judge. It cannot be imagined that the
framers of the Constitution provided for removal of a supe-
rior Judge on lesser grounds of misbehaviour but nor for the
gross misbehaviour of corruption. There is no escape from
the conclusion that the gross misbehaviour of corruption of
a Judge must undoubtedly fall within the ambit or Article
124(5) justifying his removal in the manner provided in
Article 124(4). Article 124(5) con-
301
templates a special law enacted by the Parliament even for
investigation into any allegation of misbehaviour which must
include an allegation of corruption. Can it, therefore, be
said that while investigation into the allegation of corrup-
tion for the purpose of removal under Article 124(4) needs a
special law made by the Parliament under Article 124(5), it
is not so for his prosecution which can be made under the
provisions of the existing Prevention of Corruption Act? It
appears that the framers of the Constitution did not contem-
plate the need for prosecution of a Judge at that level and
expected that a superior Judge would resign if faced with
credible material in support of allegations of misbehaviour,
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and in case he did not resign, his removal under Article
124(5) would be sufficient to deal with the situation. The
need for his prosecution was not visualised and, therefore,
not provided for in the existing law. The Act had already
been made when the Constitution was framed and the amendment
made in the Act in 1964 was after the experience for some
time of the functioning of the judiciary under the Constitu-
tion. It is significant that even the Judges (Inquiry) Act,
1968, was enacted under Article 124(5) of the Constitution
much later and after the 1964 amendment of the Act. The fact
that the Parliament did not enact any other law even then
for the investigation into allegations of corruption against
a superior Judge and for his trial and punishment for that
offence and rest content merely with enacting the Judges
(Inquiry) Act, 1968, to provide for the procedure for remov-
al of a Judge under Article 124(4) is a clear pointer in the
direction that the Parliament has not as yet considered it
expedient to enact any such law for the trial and punishment
on the charge of corruption of a superior Judge, except by
his removal from office in the manner prescribed. It may
also be noticed that the provisions of the Judges (Inquiry)
Act, 1968, provide the procedure for investigation and proof
of an allegation of corruption against a superior Judge and
if the Prevention of Corruption Act is held applicable to
them, then there would be two separate procedures under
these two enactments providing for investigation into the
same charge. Can this anomaly and incongruity be attributed
to a conscious act of the Parliament while enacting the
Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968, after the 1964 amendment in the
Act.
Maybe, need is now felt for a law providing for trial
and punishment of a superior Judge who is charged with the
criminal misconduct of corruption by abuse of his office. If
that be so, the Parliament being the sole arbiter, it is for
the Parliament to step in and enact suitable legislation in
consonance with the constitutional scheme which provides for
preservation of the independence of judiciary and it is not
for this Court to expand the field of operation of the
existing law to cover
302
the superior Judges by usurping the legislative function of
enacting guidelines to be read in the existing law by impli-
cation, since without the proposed guidelines the existing
legislation cannot apply to them. Such an exercise by the
Court does not amount to construing an ambiguous provision
to advance the object of its enactment, but would be an act
of trenching upon a virgin field of legislation and bringing
within the ambit of the existing legislation a category of
persons outside it, to whom it was not intended to apply
either as initially enacted or when amended later.
In this context, it would not be out of place to mention
that this unfortunate situation has also another dimension.
The framers of the Constitution had visualised that the
constitutional scheme for appointment of the superior Judges
would ensure that by an honest exercise performed by all the
constitutional functionaries of their obligation in the
process of appointment of a superior Judge, there would be
no occasion to try and punish any appointee to such a
high office for an act of corruption. Appointment of superi-
or Judges is from amongst persons of mature age with known
background and reputation in the legal profession. By that
age the personality is fully developed and the propensities
and background of the appointee is well known. The collec-
tive wisdom of the constitutional functionaries involved in
the process of appointing a superior Judge is expected to
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ensure that persons of unimpeachable integrity alone are
appointed to these high offices and no doubtful persons gain
entry. In the case of any late starter or an exception, the
power of removal in accordance with Article 124(4) by adopt-
ing the procedure prescribed under Article 124(5) was ex-
pected to be sufficient to eradicate the exceptional menace
while preserving independence of the judiciary. If this
scheme is found to be inadequate in the present context, it
is also indicative of the failure of the constitutional
functionaries involved in the process of appointments in
fulfilling the confidence reposed in them. It is not unlike-
ly that the care and attention expected from them in the
discharge of this obligation has not been bestowed in all
cases. The need for such legislation now would, therefore,
not be entirely on account of the absence of it so far, but
also due to the failure of proper discharge of this consti-
tutional obligation and not any defect in the constitutional
scheme. It is, therefore, time that all the constitutional
functionaries involved in the process of appointment of
superior Judges should be fully alive to the serious impli-
cations of their constitutional obligation and be zealous in
its discharge in order to ensure that no doubtful appoint-
ment can be made even if sometime a good appointment does
not go through. This is not difficult to achieve. The work-
ing of the appointment process is a
303
matter connected with this question and not divorced from
it. most often, it is only a bad appointment which could
have been averred that gives rise to a situation raising the
question of the need of such a law. Due emphasis must,
therefore, be laid on prevention even while taking curative
measures.
It is a sad commentary on the working of the appointment
process and the behaviour of some of the appointees which
has led to this situation. The confidence reposed in them by
the framers of the Constitution has been betrayed to this
extent. It was expected that the superior Judges who were
constituted into a different class and created as superior
morally not needing the deterrence of such a law to punish
them would be alive to the need of a high code of conduct
regulating their behaviour justifying the absence of such a
law for them. It was reasonable to further expect that the
aberrations, if any, in their rank would be subject to the
moral and social sanction of their community ensuring that
they tread the right path. The social sanction of their own
community was visualised as sufficient safeguard with im-
peachment and removal from office under Article 124(4) being
the extreme step needed, if at all. It appears that the
social sanction of the community has been waning and inade-
quate of late. If so, the time for legal sanction being
provided may have been reached. No doubt for the judicial
community in general it would be a sad day to become suspect
needing such a legislation to keep it on the right track.
However, that is the price the entire community has to pay
if its internal checks in the form of moral and social
sanction are found deficient and inadequate to meet the
situation which legal sanction alone can prevent. It is for
the Parliament to decide whether that stage has reached in
the superior judiciary when legal sanction alone can be the
remedy for maintenance of public confidence in the integrity
of the superior judiciary without which independence of the
judiciary would itself be in jeopardy.
The view that Judges of the High Courts and the Supreme
Court are outside the purview of the Prevention of Corrup-
tion Act, fits in with the constitutional scheme and is also
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in harmony with the several nuances of the entire existing
law relating to the superior Judges while the contrary view
fouls with it at several junctures and leaves many gaping
holes which cannot be filled by judicial exercise. The
patchwork of proposing guidelines suggested by the learned
Solicitor General apart from being an impermissible judicial
exercise, also does not present a complete and harmonious
picture and fails to provide answers to several obvious
querries which arise. The inescapable con-
304
clusion, therefore, is that the Prevention of Corruption
Act, 1947, as amended by the 1964 amendment is inapplicable
to Judges of the High Courts and the Supreme Court. Juris-
prudentially this conclusion need not be anathema as stated
in 46 Am. Jur. 2d. s. 84:--
"In the absence of a statute, misfeasance of a
judicial officer is not a criminal offence,
impeachment being the exclusive remedy."
These words summarise the true legal position in the case of
superior Judges who are separately classified in the consti-
tutional scheme itself.
There is nothing strange about the above view since the
scheme in some other countries also appears to be the same.
In recent years in some countries, there were instances
which provoked a strong debate on the subject and different
remedies were advocated to deal with the situation. It may
be mentioned that instances of punishment for corruption in
earlier centuries including the indictment of Lord Bacon is
not apposite for the reason that the situation then was not
akin to the scheme in the Indian Constitution for the judges
of the High Courts and the Supreme Court and the protection
given to them for ensuring the independence of judiciary.
As indicated earlier, while adopting curative measures
for the malady, a renewed emphasis on its prevention in the
future has to be borne in mind. In this context, it is
useful to recall the high esteem in which the higher judici-
ary was held by the prime builders of our nation in its
nascent stage. In a letter dated 18th December, 1947, to the
Prime Minister, Pt. Jawaharlal Nehru and the Deputy Prime
Minister, Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, the first Chief Justice
of free India said:
"Under the Constitution Act, provi-
sions can be made for the appointment, the
salary, pension, leave and removal of the
judges. In addition to that, I think it will
be desirable to insert a provision under the
Act, or to frame statutory rule under the Act,
defining the relations between the judiciary
and the executive. All communications in
respect of the appointments and the griev-
ances, if any, of the judges should come from
the Chief Justice of the provincial High
Court, through the Governor and not through
the Home Department of the province. I recog-
nise that the Governor-General or the Presi-
dent, who will be an elected person, will have
to consult the Cabinet according to the
305
Rules of Business framed for working the
Central Government. It seems to me, however,
fundamentally essential that the High Courts,
the Federal Court and the Supreme Court (when
established) should not be considered a part
of, or working under, any department of the
executive Government of India. It should be an
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independent branch of the Government in touch
directly with the GovernorGeneral or the
President of the Dominion of India.
I am sure the Cabinet will agree to
the principle of keeping the judiciary free
from the control of the executive. The duty
and credit for maintaining this high tradition
is on the Government in existence when
the’Constitution and the statutory rules are
framed, and I have written this to you confi-
dently hoping that you share my desire to
safeguard the dignity and independence of the
judiciary and will do the needful in the
matter."
Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel promptly replied to the Chief
Justice of India saying ’your views will be very helpful to
us in dealing with the subject.’
(Sardar Patel’s Correspondence, 1945-50,
edited by Durga Das, Vol. VI, pp. 274-76)
The framers of the Constitution had visualized the
higher echelons of the judiciary as comprised of men of
strong moral and ethical fibre who would provide moral
leadership in the society of free India and function as the
sentinel of the other wings of the State not needing scruti-
ny themselves. Our Constitution provides for separation of
powers of the three wings of the State with judicial review
as one of the essential tenets of the basic structure of the
Constitution. It is thus the judiciary which is entrusted
with the task of interpretation of the Constitution and
ensuring that the other two wings do not overstep the limit
delineated for them by the Constitution. With this duty
entrusted to the higher judiciary, it was natural to expect
that the higher judiciary would not require any other agency
to keep a watch over it and the internal discipline flowing
from the moral sanction of the community itself will be
sufficient to keep it on the right track without the re-
quirement of any external check which may have the tendency
to interfere with the independence of the judiciary, a
necessary concomitant of the proper exercise of its consti-
tutional obligation. It is for this reason that the higher.
judiciary was treated differently in the
306
Constitution indicating the great care and attention be-
stowed in prescribing the machinery for making the appoint-
ments. It was expected that any deviation from the path of
rectitude at that level would be a rare phenomenon and for
the exceptional situation the provision for removal in
accordance with clause (4) of Article 124 was made, the
difficulty in adopting that course being itself indicative
of the rarity with which it was expected to be invoked. It
appears that for a rare aberrant at that level, unless he
resigned when faced with such a situation, removal from
office in accordance with Article 124(4) was envisaged as
the only legal sanction. If this was the expectation of the
framers of the Constitution and their vision of the moral
fibre in the higher echelons of the judiciary in free India,
there is nothing surprising in the omission to bring them
within the purview of the Prevention of Corruption Act,
1947, or absence of a similar legislation for them alone.
Obviously, this position continued even during the delibera-
tions of the Santhanam Committee which clearly mentioned
inits Report submitted in 1964 that it has considered the
judiciary outside the ambit of its deliberations. Clearly,
it was expected that the higher judiciary whose word would
be final in the interpretation of all laws including the
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Constitution, will be comprised of men leading in the spirit
of self-sacrifice concerned more with their obligations than
rights, so that there would be no occasion for anyone else
to sit in judgment over them. If it is considered that the
situation has altered requiring scrutiny of the conduct of
even Judges at the highest level and that it is a matter for
the Parliament to decide, then the remedy lies in enacting
suitable legislation for that purpose providing for said
guards to ensure independence of judiciary since the exist-
ing law does not provide for that situation. Any attempt to
bring the Judges of the High Courts and the Supreme Court
within the purview of the Prevention of Corruption Act by a
seemingly constructional exercise of the enactment, appears
to me, in all humility, an exercise to fit a square peg in a
round hole when the two were never intended to match.
I would, therefore, allow the appeal even though by the
majority view it must fail.
ORDER
In view of the majority judgments, the appeal
is dismissed.
R.P. Appeal dismissed.
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